Taxonomy of meanings for 阜:
- 阜 fù (OC: buʔ MC: biu) 房久切 上 廣韻:【陵阜釋名曰土山曰阜阜厚也言髙厚也廣雅曰無石曰阜 】
-
ABUNDANT
- viabundant ZHANG HENG, 東京賦:鳥獸阜滋"there was an abundance of birds and beasts".
- vtoNcausativecause to be abundant FAYAN: 務在殷民阜財 "the purpose is in giving ample supplies to the people and making their supplies abundant".
-
FLOURISH
- viprocessflourish
-
MOUND
- nnon-rocky mountain smaller than líng 陵
- MOUNTAIN
- nmountain (large like Kunlun)CH
- INCREASE
- FAT
- HIGH
- EARNEST
- INTENSE
- RESPECT
- PEOPLE
- PEACEFUL
- = 父
-
ABUNDANT
- 阜 fù (OC: buʔ MC: biu) 房久切 上 廣韻:【同阜 】
Additional information about 阜
說文解字:
- Criteria
- MOUNTAIN
1. The general term for a mountain of any kind, large or small, is shān 山.
2. Yuè 岳/嶽 refers is a positive way to one of the great mountains of China, and the word typically functions as the head word in a noun phrase, as in 五岳. (Note that obviously in proper names and designations of titles (e.g. the title sì yuè 四岳 ) the two characters are not interchangeable.)
3. Fù 阜 refers to a large non-rocky mountain with an elevated plain on top.
4. Ā 阿 refers to a very large non-rocky mountan with an elevated plain on top.
5. Qiū 丘 refers to a small non-rocky earth mound.
6. Yuán 原 can refer to the highlands and is marginal in this group.
7. Lǐng 嶺, later sometimes written 領, is not a post-Han word, as many dictionaries might lead one to suppose, but the word is very rare in pre-Han times. The word refers to mountains as forming a series, often connoting a road along the ridge.