Taxonomy of meanings for 經:  

  • jīng (OC: keeŋ MC: keŋ) 古靈切 平 廣韻:【常也絞也徑也亦經緯又姓出何氏姓苑古靈切又音徑四 】
  • jìng (OC: keeŋs MC: keŋ) 古定切 去 廣韻:【經緯又古靈切 】
    • main> THREAD
      • nmain thread; warp
      • metonymy: medical, conduit> TUBE
          • geographic: river bed> CHANNEL
            • nriver bed; pattern of water-flow
        • abstract> STANDARD
          • nabstandard guidelineCH
          • of measurement> MEASURE
            • vtoNmeasure up properly as in the preparation of an architecural activity
          • time> ALWAYS
            • padVregularly, always
            • vadNroutine (buseness,matters)CH
          • concrete> RULE
            • nabmetaphysicalleading thread, warp; cardinal principle
            • vadNwho act according to the relevant guidelines
            • viactfollow a constant guideline
            • nabfigurativebasic normative guidelineCH
            • systematic> METHOD
              • nabstandard methodCH
              • concrete for future> PLAN
                • vt+V[0]plan to V
                • vtoNplan systematically; plan (and build)
              • attitudinal, treat as: conform to as rule> CONFORM
                • vtoNfollow as one's guideline
              • social> LAW
                • nabmethodunchanging canonical standard, canonical obligatory rule
              • philosophical> PRINCIPLE
                • nab.post-Nthe warp> underlying principles and rules
                • vibe properly principled; be in accordance with the classics
                • nabbasic guiding principleCH
          • literary> CLASSIC
            • nclassic book; main textBUDDH: Buddhist scripture, often concretely referring to sūtras which traditionally were regarded as the words of Buddha
            • nabmathematical termCHEMLA 2003: Already Liu Hui's preface to JZ refers to JZ as a 經 in the notoriously ill-understood phrase 經術 which, in Liu Hui's preface to JZ must refer to "the procedures in the Classic (i.e. in the JZ)". Thus whereas the JZ itself does not declare itself to be a 經, the earliest commentary does. If, as many modern Chinese translators suggest, 經 had to be taken to refer to the Confucian classics in Liu Hui's commentary, this would mark an uncharacteristically diffuse departure from the mathematical topic of his great commentary.
            • generalised> BOOK
              • nspecialised book, comprehensive book 山海經 or 本草經,茶經
              • abstract> LITERATURE
                • nabbuddhistBUDDH: Buddhist genre, this is the standard word for canonical texts attributed to Buddha Śākyamuni (see also the rare 修多羅 and 契經; the first genre in the twelve-fold division of the Buddhist canon 十二部經) (see also CLASSIC); SANSKRIT sūtra
          • action: imposed regular activity> WORK
            • nabactlarge undertakings; work
            • leading> GOVERN
              • nab.tactgovernment of N, regular administration of N
              • vibe well-ordered
              • vtoNgovern well, govern properly; deal with efficiently as the person responsible
              • vtoNreflexive.自govern (oneself)
      • use to hang oneself> STRANGLE
        • vtoNreflexive.自hang (oneself)
        • reflexive> SUICIDE
          • vt[oN]hang oneself
          • nsubjectsomeone who has been trying to hang oneself, near-hangmanLZ
        • generalised> KILL
          • vtoNreflexive.自kill (oneself)
        • action: thread through> CROSS OVER
          • nabactpassage through somewhere
          • vt+prep+Npass through (a time N)
          • vtoNpass through; cut through
          • vt+prep+NN=placecross over, pass through
          • go through and experience> ENCOUNTER
              • passive: be encountered> HAPPEN
                • vt0+prep+N.postSfigurative?? (a certain amount of time has) passed/gone by (since the event expressed in S); or: an event S lasts/endures for the period indicated by N
                • vt0oN.postadVfor an N length of time
                • vt0oN{SUBJ}pass (as periods of time do)
                • vt0oNfigurative(an amount of time) passed
                • vt0oN.adSduring the N length of timeDS
                • vt0oN.postS1:adS2it elapsed N period of time after S1 and S2 happenedDS
                • grammaticalised: after S has occurred> ONLY THEN
                  • vtoN.adShaving passed through the time N, S happened > only after the time N, then S
        • ten billion> NUMBER
          • nabmathematical termten 兆,ten billion

        Additional information about 經

        說文解字: 【經】,織也。从糸、巠聲。 【九丁切】

          Criteria
        • CHINESE LANGUAGE

          1. guānhuà 官話 "Mandarin" is obsolete, and its traditional antonym was xiāngyǔ 鄉語 "local speech".

          From Míng Dynasty times, this was a current word for the common vernacular language used by administrative staff of any kind throughout China.

          DC: 明何良俊《四友齋叢說 ‧ 史十一》: " 雅宜不喜作鄉語,每發口必官話。 "

          2. báihuà 白話 "plain speech, vernacular" (as opposed to wényán 文言 )

          This is a modern word referring to an easily accessible written version of the Chinese language. In classical contexts or early vernacular contexts the expression always seems to refer to "empty talk" rather than the vernacular language.

          3. guóyǔ 國語 "national language" (ant. wàiyǔ 外語 ) (pre-1950ies and Taiwan)

          A word that continues to be in increasing common use even in Mainland China today, and which is standard in places like Malaysia or Singapore, as well as in Taiwan.

          4. zhōngguóyǔ 中國語 "language of China" (ant. wàiguóyǔ 外國語 )

          Current Japanese way of writing the Japanese word for the Chinese language, but the expression has a long history in China, the first attested use being in Yáng Xióng's Model Sayings of the first century BC.

          5. pǔtōnghuà 普通話 "common language" (Mainland China) (ant. dìfāngyǔ 地方語, fāngyán 方言 "dialect (not in the ancient meaning)")

          This is a very common modern expression which corresponds to Greek koinē, and the word is always used in counterdistinction to (often mutually incomprehensible) dialects. The word has a rather political flair.

          6. Hànyǔ 漢語 "language of the Hàn people" (should include all dialects, but is often used otherwise)

          This is the most current word for the Chinese language as opposed to other 族語 "national languages". The word is very current in the Buddhist Tripitaka, but it is also attested elsewhere 庾信《奉和法筵應詔》: " 佛影胡人記,經文漢語翻。 ". The term is also attested in 世說新語.

          7. Zhōngguóhuà 中國話 "Chinese speech" (includes all dialects)

          This word is always used in counterdistinction to foreign languages. It has become current in international contexts in nineteenth century novels.

          8. Zhōngwén 中文 "Chinese (typically written) language" (ant. wàiwén 外文, often icludes speech: 會說中文 )

          This word is already attested in the medieval 搜神記, where it refers to the written language. In Modern Standard Chinese this is a very common way of referring to Chinese as opposed to foreign languages, and as a subject in school curricula.

          9. Huáyǔ 華語 "Chinese talk" (used mainly in Singapore, Hong Kong etc.)

          This word has a long history in Buddhist texts, and it is also already attested in 劉知幾《史通 ‧ 言語》: "... 必諱彼夷音,變成華語.

          10. Hànyīn 漢音 "Han-Chinese sounds" refers to the Chinese language in a poetic style. Sanskrit is currently referred to as 梵音.

          HD sub verbo 漢文: 2. 漢語;漢字。南朝梁僧祐《梵漢譯經音義同异記》: " 或善梵義而不了漢音,或明漢文而不曉梵意。 "

          HD: 2. 指漢語。南朝宋朱廣之《咨顧道士<夷夏論>》: " 想茲漢音,流入彼國。 "

          老子漢人也。

          新修科分六學僧傳 R133_p0714a04(02)║

          胡蕃國也。土地不同。則言音亦異。當其化胡成佛之際。為作漢音耶。作蕃音耶。苟以漢音。則蕃國有所不解。以蕃音。則此經之至。宜須翻譯。

          11. Hàn yán 漢言 "Hàn language, language of the Hàn Dynasty> Chinese" (ant. 胡言 or 胡語 ) is a historico-ethnographic term.

          This remained a very common way of referring to the Chinese language long after the Hàn Dynasty, as is clear from the Buddhist Tripitaka. (424 occurrences in CBETA.)

          T25n1512_p0835b29(05)║

          胡言般若波羅蜜。

          漢言智慧彼岸也

          T48n2023_p1095c25(00)║

          志曰。

          佛者。 Buddha

          漢言覺也。 is "the enlightened" in Hàn language"

          將以覺悟群生也。 He will bring enlightenment to the sentient beings.

          12. Wényán 文言 "literary Chinese" (ant. báihuà 白話 "plain vernacular") today refers to a modernised version of traditional classical Chinese, as used for example in letters. But in the Buddhist Tripitaka, for example, the phrase regularly refers to ornate Chinese, ornate formulations. Neither traditionally nor in modern times is 文言 used in counterdistinction to foreign languages: the contrast is with other varieties of Chinese.

          DC: 4. 別於白話的古漢語書面語。蔡元培《在國語傳習所的演說》: " 文言上還有例句,如 ' 爾無我詐,我無爾虞 ' 等。 "

          13. wényánwén 文言文 "literary Chinese writing" (ant. báihuàwén 白話文 ) refers to classical Chinese as it continues to be used in the introductions to books and in formal letter-writing.

          This is a twentieth century word, as far as I can see.

          14. báihuà-wén 白話文 "plain talk writing" (ant. wényánwén 文言文 ) is a term with a strong stylistic nuance.

          This is a twentieth century word.

          15. tōngyòngyǔ 通用語 "general use language".

          This is a twentieth century neologism designed to replace 普通話. The term has never achieved broad use.

          16. dàzhòngyǔ 大眾語 "mass language" is obsolete today.

          This is a politicised ideological concept stressing the universal use and popularity of the Chinese language as advocated by language politicians. It is a twentieth century political neologism.

          17. guówén 國文 "state writing" refers in a formal way to written Chinese.

          This is a twentieth century term mainly used in connection with educational politics.

          HD: 許地山《東野先生》: “ 這不是國文教科書底一課麼? ”

          18. Hàn wén 漢文 (obsolete, current in Buddhist texts) "Hàn (typically written) language"

          HD: 2. 漢語;漢字。南朝梁僧祐《梵漢譯經音義同异記》: " 或善梵義而不了漢音,或明漢文而不曉梵意。 "

          19. Zhōngguó wénzì 中國文字 "the Chinese (written) language"

          T49n2036_p0477a06(03)║ 

          中國文字未通。蓋不可知也。

          R110_p0542b01(05)║

          偈語原必有韻譯以中國文字。則無可協。

          R110_p0542b09(00)║

          流入東土後。以中國文字經為尊稱。故亦稱經。

          20. Huá yán 華言 is an obsolete traditional term for Chinese that comes over 1200 times in Taisho Tripitaka.

          R150_p0541a 13(00)║

          剌麻者。乃西域之尊稱。

          譯華言為無上二字。

          R149_p0695a 12(00)║

          梵語阿修羅。亦云阿素洛。

          又云阿須倫。

          華言非天。

          R149_p0718b05(03)║

          梵語袈裟華言壞色衣。

          21. dōngtǔ Huáxiàyán 東土華夏言 "Chinese language in the eastern regions" is an ad hoc periphrastic expression which one might insist was never lexicalised, but it is perhaps worth recording just as well, if only in order to

          R059_p0119b04(00)║

          梵語。西天梵國語也。

          華言。東土華夏言也。

          譯者翻也。

          謂翻梵天之語。轉成漢地之言也。

          22. Hàn'ér yányǔ 漢兒言語 "Hàn language" is a term that is current in Korean textbooks of colloquial Chinese, like the famous 老乞大 : “ 你是高麗人,卻怎麼漢兒言語說的好。 ” See also the article in 太田辰夫《漢語史通考 · 關於漢兒言語》

          23. Jìn wén 晉文 (obsolete, current in Buddhist texts) "Jìn (typically written) language" is fairly rare, but clear examples are easily found:

          T50n2059_p0326c12(02)║

          還歸中夏。

          自燉煌至長安。

          沿路傳譯寫為晉文。

          24. Jìn yán 晉言 (obsolete, current in Buddhist texts) "Language of the Jìn" is common indeed, but many examples can be read technically as "in Jìn this translates as". Not however in this example:

          於龜茲國金華祠。

          T14n0434_p0105ā6(01)║ 

          演出此經。譯梵音為晉言。

          T33n1693_p0001ā7(01)║

          斯經似安世高譯。為晉言也。 (punctuation probably wrong!)

          25. Jìn yǔ 晉語 (obsolete, current in Buddhist texts) "Speech of the Jìn"

          T50n2059_p0329ā2(00)║

          手執梵文口宣晉語。

          T55n2145_p0072b24(03)║

          先誦本文。

          然後乃譯為晉語。

          26. Jìn yīn 晉音 "Jìn Dynasty speech"

          T14n0434_p0105á1(00)║

          沙門慧海者。通龜茲語。

          善解晉音。

          林復命使譯龜茲語為晉音。

          T50n2060_p0634á6(02)║

          外國語云阿耨菩提。

          晉音翻之無上大道。

          27. Qín yán 秦言 "Qín language> Chinese" is the standard way of providing Chinese translations for Sanskrit words in the Buddhist Tripitaka. (No less than 1132 examples in CBETA, but mostly formulaic, as in the following examples.)

          答曰。摩訶秦言大。 "maha is "big"in Chinese"

          T25n1509_p0383á2(03)║

          今問摩訶薩義。摩訶者秦言大。

          28. Qín yǔ 秦語 "Speech of the Qín > Chinese"

          In the Buddhist Tripitaka, this is a very formal term for Chinese, not very common. (Only 22 occurrences in CBETA)

          T26n1543_p0771b02(08)║

          梵本十五千七十二首盧 ( 四十八萬二千五百四言 ) 。

          秦語十九萬五千二百五十言。

          T51n2068_p0053c09(05)║

          什自手執胡經。

          口譯秦語曲從方言而趣不乖本。

          T51n2068_p0054á9(07)║

          什自執梵本口譯秦語。

          T55n2145_p0072b07(28)║

          胡本十五千七十二首盧 ( 四十八萬二千三百四言 ) 秦語十九萬五千二百五十言

          T55n2145_p0073c09(02)║

          胡本一萬一千七百五十二首盧長五字也。

          凡三十七萬六千六十四言也。

          秦語為十六五千九百七十五字。

          29. Táng wén 唐文 (obsolete, current in Buddhist texts) "Táng (typically written) language"

          This is the standard way of referring to the written Chinese language in Buddhist texts of the Táng dynasty.

          R130_p0664b06(02)║

          以華言唐文刻釋氏經典

          T39n1797_p0803b21(10)║

          不得梵文依唐文得意亦同。

          T48n2025_p1160a24(08)║

          唐文多對偶當盡翻譯。

          T50n2060_p0614c17(05)║

          有天竺三藏大齎梵本擬譯唐文。

          R024_p0177a16(02)║ 

          語精梵言。

          雖亦兼美唐文。

          乍來恐未盡善。

          30. Táng yán 唐言 (obsolete, current in Buddhist texts) "Language of the Táng".

          1523 occurrences in CBETA. Occasionally, one wonders whether this does refer to Táng time Chinese whereas Hànyīn 漢音 does not:

          T20n1177Ap0724c02(01)║

          遂將得舊翻譯唐言漢音經本在寺。

          31. Táng yǔ 唐語 (obsolete, current in Buddhist texts) "Speech of the Táng"

          A fairly rare way of referring to the Chinese language in Táng Buddhist texts. (Only 18 occurrences in CBETA)

          R014_p0563a14(02)║

          印度罽賓皆未詳唐語。

          R036_p0985a16(18)║    

          又多兩重怗文當知初依梵文後釋唐語

          T30n1579_p0283c07(05)║

          三藏法師玄奘。

          敬執梵文譯為唐語。

          32. Táng yīn 唐音 "Táng speech" is a regular expression for Táng Dynasty Chinese in the Buddhist Tripitaka.

          R036_p0584b13600)

          梵語本是兩名唐音無以甄別

          R066_p0717b08(01)║

          此偈乃是梵語訛言。

          傳者將為唐音正字。

          33. Tánghuà 唐話 "Táng talk" is a current Cantonese term for Chinese, and the famous intellectual 許地山 writes: 他說的雖是唐話,但是語格和腔調全是不對的。 But in this phrase, I am instructed by my teacher and friend Jiǎng Shàoyú, Táng refers not to the dynasty but to 唐山.

          34. Dà Táng yǔ 大唐語 "Speech of the Great Táng Dynasty" is rarely attested, but the word does exist:

          R150_p1055b17(00)║

          若僧雖是新羅人。却會大唐語。 Monk Ruò was a person from Xīnluó, but he spoke the language of the Great Táng Dynasty.

          35. Hàn 漢 is an abbreviation for Hànyǔ 漢語 currently used in Buddhist translation theory, but the word is not in itself a term for the Chinese language outside such technical contexts.

          T21n1293_p0378c15(02)║ 

          翻梵為漢 Translate the Sanskrit into Chinese.

          R068_p0353b05(05)║

          梵是天竺之言。

          漢是此土之語。

          R133_p0623b09(07)║

          序以條列梵漢旨義。

          R005_p0007b03(02)║

          翻譯之家自有規准。 The specialists in translation have their own standards.

          若名梵漢共有。 If a term exists both in Sanskrit and in Chinese

          則敵對而翻。 than they just match the terms up in translation.

          36. Táng 唐 "language of the Táng Dynsasty.

          梵唐

          T54n2133Ap1196b12(02)║ 

          一曰義淨撰梵語千字文。

          或名梵唐千字文。

          T55n2176_p1118a01(00)║ 

          梵唐對譯阿彌陀經一卷 ( 仁 )

          This is the same as 梵唐語:

          T55n2176_p1118b20(00)║ 

          梵唐語對註譯大佛頂真言一卷

          T55n2176_p1119c19(18)║

          梵唐對譯法花二十八品

          T55n2176_p1120a05(00)║ 

          梵唐對譯金剛般若經二卷

          T55n2176_p1131a06(00)║ 

          梵唐文字一卷

          37. Jìn 晉 "the language of the Jìn Dynasty.

          The term is rarely used to refer directly to the language, unlike the common Táng 唐. But examples do exist:

          T55n2157_p0795c08(08)║

          既學兼梵晉故譯義精允。

          38. nèidìhuà 內地話 refers to the language spoken on the Mainland, and the word is mostly used on Taiwan. This term represents an outsider's view on the Chinese language. (2.9 million hits in Google! This important word was brought to my attention by Jens Østergaard Petersen.)

          39. shénzhōu yǔ 神州語 "the language of our divine land" is quaint, nationalistically sentimental, and a rare way of referring to the Chinese language.

          beijing.kijiji.cn/á1221463.html:

          心中一暖,想到他居然會說神州語,正要說些甚麼,但一開口,嘴部動作牽動喉嚨,...

          40. zúyǔ 族語 "the national language (of the Chinese) is a borderline case because the term refers to national languages in general, and only by extension to Chinese in particular.

          42. Hàn dì zhī yán 漢地之言 "language of the Ha4n territory" is a marginal periphrastic expression which one should probably not regard as a lexicalised item. One could study such periphrastic expressions separately from the lexicalised vocabulary.

          R059_p0119b06(06)║

          謂翻梵天之語。轉成漢地之言也。

          [43. jīngpiànzi 京片子 "Chinese as spoken in Peking" is a borderline case because it does refer to Peking speech, but not insofar as it is the standard for the whole of China. Colloquial examples of this sort could be multiplied...]

        • SUICIDE

          1. The general term for suicide is zì shā 自殺, and 殺己 is hardly ever used for suicide.

          2. Zì cǎi 自裁 refers to suicide by cutting oneself in some way or other.

          3. Zì jìn 自盡 is politely periphrastic and refers to putting an end to one's life in any way.

          4. Zì wěn 自刎 refers to a dramatic act of cutting one's own throat.

          5. Zì jīng 自經 refers to suicide by strangling oneself.

          6. Zì chén 自沉 refers to suicide by drowning.

          7. Sǐ 死 is often used causatively and reflexively to refer to an act of suicide.

        • PRINCIPLE

          1. Lǐ 理 refers to inherent structuring patterns of things.

          2. Zé 則 refers to a rule or pattern to be followed.

          3. Fǎ 法 (often: "model, method, procedure, law" can refer to a man-made rule pattern or rule, never a "law of nature" and rarely a pattern set by nature.

          4. Zhì 制 refers to a humanly instituted system of principles and rules.

          5. Yào 要 refers to the single underlying most important principle that governs something.

          6. Jīng 經 refers to a basic guideline that one might prefer to follow.

        • STRANGLE

          1. Jiǎo 絞 refers to the act of strangling someone else.

          2. Yì 縊 refers to strangling oneself. See SUICIDE.

          3. Jīng 經 refers to strangling oneself by hanging oneself.

        • CROSS OVER

          1. The most general current word for crossing over something is guò 過.

          2. Dù 渡 typically refers to crossing water by foot or boat, and the word became exceedingly common from Han times onwards.

          3. Shè 涉 typically refers to crossing water by foot.

          4. Jīng 經 typically refers to crossing or passing through territory.

          5. Lì 歷 refers to passing through territories or time spans. For the latter meaning the character 曆 came to be used in later times.

          6. Yuè 越 and chāo 超 refer to leaping or striding across something. See also LEAP OVER

          7. Kuà 跨 refers to striding across something, see LEAP OVER.

          8. Jué 絕 refers in a somewhat elevated style to crossing a river or a desert by any means of transport.

          9. Fàn 犯 refers to managing to get across something that is hard to cross, but this usage is rare.

          10. Háng 杭/航 is an ancient word for crossing a river by ferry.

        • RULE

          1. Perhaps the most current general word for a (typically political or moral) guideline is jì 紀.

          2. Gāng 綱 refers primarily to the guide-rope of a net, and then by extension to a general guideline guiding one through something complex.

          3. Jīng 經 refers to an operative underlying main principle which man also may take as a guideline.

          4. Wěi 緯 refers to a secondary principle operative in things which man also may take as a guideline.

          5. Wéi 維 refers to the guiding lines attached to the four corners of a fishing net and hence by extension to the overall metaphysical principles guiding the universe.

        • LAW

          1. The current general word for a law, a legal system or any legal provision of any kind is fǎ 法.

          2. Lu �律 is far more specialised as a specific term referring to concrete and detailed regulations rather than a legal system as a whole, and the word is also syntactically much less flexible. Thus we have 先王之法 and not 先王之律.

          The complexities of legal terminology can be preliminarily summarised as follows:

          A. The rule may be explicit (chéng 程, diǎn 典, fǎ 法, hào 號, lu �律 ); or it may be primarily conventional (cháng 常, jì 紀, jīng 經, zhì 制 ).

          B. The rule may be conceived as temporary (lìng 令, dù 度, chéng 程, hào 號 ); or it may be conceived as permanent and unchangeable (cháng 常, diǎn 典, jì 紀, jīng 經 ); or it may be conceived as long-term but clearly changeable (fǎ 法, lu �律, xiàn 憲, zhāng 章, zhì 制 ).

          C. The rules may concern legal and economic administration (chéng 程, diǎn 典, dù 度, lu �律, xiàn 憲, zhāng 章, zhì 制, and occasionally fǎ 法 ); or they may concern prohibitions of criminal conduct (fǎ 法, pì 辟, xíng 刑 ); or they may be general moral guidelines on conduct (cháng 常, hào 號, lìng 令, jì 紀 ).

          D. The focus may be on the written documents containing the rules as such (diǎn 典, xiàn 憲, zhāng 章 ); or the focus may be on the content of the rules (cháng 常, chéng 程, dù 度, lìng 令, zhì 制 ); or the primary focus may be on oral promulgation of the rule (hào 號 ).

          E. The rules may be regarded as a collective system (cháng 常, jì 紀, jīng 經, zhì 制 ); or they may be conceived as individual legal prescriptions (all others).

        • CLASSIC

          1. The pre-Han general term which became culturally crucial in Han times is jīng 經 (opp. zhuàn 傳 "commentary, tradition attached to classic") which can refer to any canonised codified "classical" text.

          2. Diǎn 典 is highly archaic and begins to be obsolete by Warring States times though the word did survive as a deliberate archaism.

          See also DECREE and LAW

        • BUILD

          1. The general current word for erecting or rebuilding a permanent structure of any kind is zhú 築.

          2. Lì 立 "to erect" focuses on the resulting uprightness of the structure, but the word.

          3. Xiū 脩 focusses on the careful finishing work of construction, and the word also applies to reconstruction with careful attention paid to the finish. [See REPAIR]

          4. Gòu 構 "make a structure" focusses on the fitting together of different parts, Lothar Ledderose's modules, to make a structured whole.

          5. Qǐ 起 "raise (a building)" is an administrative neutral term that can refer to the building of any larger structure, and the word become current in this meaning in Han times.

          6. Wéi 為 is currently used to refer specifically to the building of houses or capitals. See PRODUCE

          7. Zuò 作 "take the initiative to build" a very general word to use which can refer to all sorts of making of things. See PRODUCE.

          8. Jiàn 建 "to establish" is mostly used abstractly and not for concrete physical structures. See ESTABLISH

          9. Jīng 經 and yíng 營 are archaic and poetic words focussing on a concerted large-scale public effort.

          Word relations
        • Epithet: (RULE)常/ENDURING Cháng 常 and the especially emphatic héng 恆 "highly constant and permanent" (ant.* ǒu 偶 "contingency and consequent changeability") emphasise the constancy or constant recurrence of the attributes of what is lasting, and typically - though not always - the constancy is valued positively.
        • Contrast: (CLASSIC)典/CLASSIC Diǎn 典 is highly archaic and begins to be obsolete by Warring States times though the word did survive as a deliberate archaism.See also DECREE and LAW
        • Contrast: (RULE)紀/RULE Perhaps the most current general word for a (typically political or moral) guideline is jì 紀.
        • Assoc: (CLASSIC)典/CLASSIC Diǎn 典 is highly archaic and begins to be obsolete by Warring States times though the word did survive as a deliberate archaism.See also DECREE and LAW
        • Assoc: (CROSS OVER)歷/CROSS OVER Lì 歷 refers to passing through territories or time spans. For the latter meaning the character 曆 came to be used in later times.
        • Assoc: (CLASSIC)藝/ARTS The most general word for the polite arts in ancient China is yì 藝. [GENERAL]