Taxonomy of meanings for 區:
- 區 qū (OC: kho MC: kʰio) 豈俱切 平 廣韻:【具區吴藪名又禮曰草木茂區萌逹注云屈生曰區亦姓後漢末有長沙區景豈俱切八
】
- DISTINGUISH
- vtoNmiddle voicebe separated out; be demarkated
- DIVIDE
- vadNdivided
- vtoNdraw distinction between
- TERRITORY
- nHan dynasty: part of a territory, subterritory; area
- CONCEAL
- GOVERNMENT
- DWELLING
- FIELD
- SMALL
- NOMINAL MEASURE WORDS
- SURNAMES
- = 驅
- = 句
- DISTINGUISH
- 區 ōu (OC: qoo MC: ʔəu) 烏侯切 平 廣韻:【姓也古善劒區冶子之後今郴州有之 】
- VOLUME MEASURES
- ncpost-V{NUM}.post-Nclassifiervolume measure: sixteen bushels 4 升 ca. 200 cc make one 豆800cc, four 豆 make one 區3200cc, four 區 make one fǔ 釜 12 600cc
-
PIT
- SURNAMES
- VOLUME MEASURES
Additional information about 區
說文解字: 【區】,踦區,藏匿也。 〔小徐本「匿」作「隱」。〕 从品,在匸中。品,眾也。 【豈俱切】
- Criteria
- CHINA
睡虎地秦墓竹簡 1978: 226 臣邦人不安秦主而欲去夏者, 勿許. 何謂夏 ? 欲去親屬是謂夏.
The words for China have this in common that they do NOT designate any one state. 中國 "the central states" is implicitly plural when it does not refer to the capital city. 諸夏 the various Xià (states)" is explicitly plural. The standard Imperium Romanum has no counterpart in Chinese until very late, unless one admits 天下 "all under Heaven" as a designation for the empire. But 天下 does not define any bounded empire. It remains to be seen exactly when a standard term for China was took shape. Compare the problems of finding a term for the Chinese language.
Based on 顧頡剛 & 王樹民, “ 夏 ” 和 “ 中國 ”— 祖國古代的稱號, Zhongguo lishi dili luncong, Vol. 1 (Xi'an, 1981), 6-22).
In the Shu and Shi sections relating to the early Zhou, 區夏 (= 夏區 ), 有夏 and 時夏 (= 是夏 ) refers to the place in which the Zhou established their capital after their conquest of Shang, in contradistinction to Zhou 掇 homeland in the West ( 西土 ) and the close Zhou allies ( 一二邦 ). The Zhou referred to their own domain as 烠 he central city-state � ( 中國 ). Since 中國 in this usage refers to the territory directly governed by the Zhou, it is singular and used in exchange with 京師 and in contradistinction with 四方 and 四國. Other states also referred to their capital regions as 啎什縕 (thus Wu in GY 19.09.01/618); a (perhaps late) variant of this word is 啎尹塹 (Yugong).
After becoming strong, the states enfeoffed by Zhou asserted the community with the 周 by commencing to refer to themselves as 堔 L �, leading to the plural designation 埣悎 L �, used in contrast with designations like 啈 i 狄�. The distinction between the two groups was viewed as cultural, and its precise reference shifted over time, originally excluding states (like 楚 ) from the community of 諸夏 but later including them, or including them in the beginning, whilst later excluding them (like 秦 ). Some of the non- 諸夏 states were viewed as subservient to 諸夏 states, others as their enemies. The membership of 楚 to the 諸夏 circle was always insecure; it was, so to speak, was"always on probation.
The 東夏 made up a subdivision of the 諸夏, including states such a 齊 and 魯.
In parallel with the 堔 L � appellations arose the 埽寊 appellations, 埽寊 on its own and 埣捄寊, and, the two words may well be cognate, the common 埽堮 L �.
In the Warring States period the cultural distinction gave way to a geographical distinction, and the 中國 states were now the state occupying the Central Plain
- TERRITORY
1. The current general term for an area is fāng 方.
2. Dì 地 refers to a well-defined bounded piece of territory.
3. Qū 區 typically refers to what is regarded as a subdivision of some territory, according to some criterion.
4. Yǔ 宇 typically refers to what is construed as a comprehensive unbounded area.
5. Yù 域 refers to a bounded large area under someone's political control, or belonging to someone as a habitat.
6. Bāng 邦 (primarily "state") can be used to refer in a dignified way to large tracts of land in so far as these are under the political control from some centre or capital. and occasionally the word is expanded to bāng yù 邦域 "territory".
7. Fēng 封 is an archaic word used to refer in a dignified way to large tracts of land in so far as these are under the political control from some centre or captial, and the special emphasis is on the bounded nature of this territory.
8. Jī 畿 refers to the metropolitan area or a central territory under the direct control of a ruler.
9. Tián 田 can be used to refer to bounded pieces of land belonging to someone.
- Word relations
- Assoc: (TERRITORY)處/PLACE
The most general word referring to the location of something is chù 處 which may refer to the location in which a thing happens to be at some point in time, or to the place where something belongs, and the word refers to both abstract and concrete spatial location.