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tiān
HSK 1freq #83

Meanings

CC-CEDICT

tiān
  1. 1.day
  2. 2.sky
  3. 3.heaven

CC-CEDICT · CC BY-SA

Wiktionary

  1. 1.sky; heavens; heavenly; celestial
  2. 2.heaven as the abode of the gods or the blessed departed; heavenly
  3. 3.Heaven as an impersonal deity; often translated as God
  4. 4.deva, a god in Hinduism and some Buddhist sects
  5. 5.devaloka or Heaven, one of the six realms of existence in Buddhism
  6. 6.top; overhead
  7. 7.weather; climate
  8. 8.day (24 hours)
  9. 9.day (as opposed to night)
  10. 10.period of time in a day
  11. 11.season
  12. 12.nature
  13. 13.natural; innate

Wiktionary · CC BY-SA

Etymology

Oracle bone script: a frontal standing man (大) with four head variants: # Square or round block. # As 1, but with an elongated neck and a horizontal line. # Two equal horizontal lines. # Two unequal horizontal lines, resembling 上. Chen (2019) analyzes these as either an ideogrammic compound (大 + 上) or a phono-semantic compound (phono-semantic compound (形聲 /形声, *l̥ˤiŋ): semantic 大 + phonetic 丁 (*tˤeŋ)). Possibly cognate with 頂 (OC *tˤeŋʔ) (compare Jingpo). Compare 元 (profile man with a block or 上 head). Compare 顛: 真 contains 𠂈 (falling man), the original ideogram for 顛. See also I Ching: 其人天且(/𠭯)劓. Compare 昊 in the Shi Qiang pan. This character was previously reconstructed to have a /*tʰ/-initial in Old Chinese, but this hypothesis has been largely discounted in recent reconstructions, in light of evidence from early Chinese accounts of dialectal pronunciations, transcription of other languages, as well as cognate/derived characters within Chinese, which has all pointed to a voiceless resonant initial /*l̥-/ in Old Chinese. According to chapter 1 of Shiming, by c. 200 CE, this initial had already produced dialectal variation in the pronunciation: People in central-western China pronounced it with the back of the tongue, like 顯 (MC xenX), while people in eastern China pronounced it with the tip of the tongue, like 坦 (MC thanX). An old northwestern dialect variant survives as 祆 (MC xen, “God of the Zoroastrians”), and the word 天竺 (MC then trjuwk, “India”) was used to transcribe Old Persian *Hind-uka ("India"). Further etymology is unknown. During the time when this term was reconstructed with a /*tʰ-/ initial, it was frequently compared with tengri, the name for God in early Turkic and Mongolic peoples' languages. This now appears unlikely. The only certain external cognate is the Central Bai (a language closely related to Chinese) word heinl (“sky, heaven”) /xẽ⁵⁵/. Chen (1998) proposes cognation with 祁連 (OC *g'ieg-lian) and 赫連 (OC *khak-lian), transcriptions of a Xiongnu word for "sky", which he also relates to 昊天 (OC *g'ôg-hlin).

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Stroke order

Components

Components from cjk-decomp · MIT

Example sentences

Sentences from Tatoeba · CC-BY 2.0 FR

More examples & usage (AI)

Synonyms

Wiktionary · CC BY-SA

Derived terms

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Related words