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喽啰

嘍囉
lóu luo

Meanings

CC-CEDICT

lóu luo
  1. 1.rank and file member of an outlaw gang
  2. 2.(fig.) underling; minion; small fry

CC-CEDICT · CC BY-SA

Wiktionary

  1. 1.follower of villains; minion; underling; subordinate
  2. 2.capable person; true man
  3. 3.rank and file of a band of outlaws
  4. 4.speaking in an indistinct and unintelligible manner; gabbling; jabbering
  5. 5.noisy; clamorous; disturbing; winding; tedious
  6. 6.clever and capable; bright and skilful; astute and experienced; shrewd

Wiktionary · CC BY-SA

Etymology

Unknown. Attested since the Northern Qi period (c. the 550s). It is likely that this was initially an ideophonic, reduplicative and onomatopoeic word, imitating the indistinct and incomprehensible speech of barbarians. Many recent studies (Jao, 1993; Li, 1998; Xu, 2003; Xu, 2005) have favoured the view that the two syllables in this word represent phonetic approximations of the four syllabic liquid consonants in Sanskrit ऋ (ṛ), ॠ (ṝ), ऌ (ḷ) and ॡ (ḹ), which are sounds in Buddhist chants that are minimally distinctive to the Chinese ear. The word has a wide range of meanings; Xu (2005) has proposed the following semantic development: : “Unintelligible and abstruse speech” > both “noisy and tedious” and “bright and capable” > “capable person; heroic man” > “villains; outlaws; bandits”. Throughout history, many theories have been put forth by imperial Chinese scholars to explain the origin of the term, but most of these are now considered folk etymologies.

Wiktionary · CC BY-SA

Stroke order

Components

Components from cjk-decomp · MIT

Characters

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Derived terms

Wiktionary · CC BY-SA