Taxonomy of meanings for 敕:
- 敕 chì (OC: rʰɯɡ MC: ʈʰɨk) 恥力切 入 廣韻:【誡也正也固也勞也理也書也急也今相承用勑勑本音賚恥力切十四 】
- COMMAND
- nabactorder
- vtoN.+Vcommand N and say:...
- vtoNin Han times: (of person in high position:) issue a command
- vtt(oN.)+V[0]order there to be V-ing
- vttoN.+Scommand N to the effect that S
- vttoN.+V[0]pivottell (someone to do something)
- DECREE
- nabtextHan bureaucracy: an edict issued to the provinces and districts concerning local affairs WENXINDIAOLONG 19
- vadVby imperial decree; by imperial order
- TEACH
- vtoNSHIJI: give a warning and an exhortation
- EMPLOY
- REPROACH
- IMPROVE
- ORDERLY
- RESPECT
- WEAR
- KNOW
- SURNAMES
- COMMAND
- 敕 chì (OC: thɯɡ MC: ʈʰɨk) 恥力切 入 廣韻:【同敕 】
Additional information about 敕
說文解字:
- Criteria
- DECREE
1. The current general word for an edict or decree is zhào 詔.
2. Mìng 命 (later often replaced by lìng 令 ) refers to any published royal or imperial order, or order of the day. See COMMAND and FATE
3. Zhì 制 is a Qin technical term for a published imperial decision.
4. Cè 策 is a Han edict appointing a king or feudal lord and investing him with a piece of territory.
5. Chì 敕 is a Han edict concerning local affairs to be distibuted in the provinces.
6. Jiè 戒 refers to a formal announcement from the Son of Heaven, typically in the form of a general warning.
7. Diǎn 典 is an archaic word referring to edicts by the Son of Heaven.
- COMMAND
1. The standard current word for a command is lìng 令, and the content (not the words) of the command is typically in the sentence that follows. We do not find: 令曰, and it is significant that lìng 令 also regularly means "to cause to".
2. Mìng 命 is typically an order from a person of high, perhaps even supernatural, authority, and what follows are often the words used to express the order. 命曰. Mìng 命 is an order on a higher level than lìng 令.
3. Shǐ 使 often refers to a superior getting or sending subordinates to do something by an order, but this word never focusses on the form of words used. See SEND, CAUSE TO
4. Zhì 制 is a formalised administrative instruction on procedure.
5. Huī 麾 is an order given prototypically by signal of the hand, and in the process of a battle.
6. Hào 號 is a publicly proclaimed political command or instruction.
7. Wèi 謂 is simply a way of telling someone to do something, informally or formally, but without the formal force of a rigid order.
8. Chì 敕 / 飭 is an order from a person in an elevated position, and in post-Buddhist times chì 敕 came to refer standardly to imperial orders.