Taxonomy of meanings for 槁:
- 槁 gǎo (OC: koowʔ MC: kɑu) 古老切 上 廣韻:【 】
- 槁 gǎo (OC: khoowʔ MC: kʰɑu) 苦浩切 上 廣韻:【木枯也説文作槀 】
Additional information about 槁
說文解字:
- Criteria
- DRY
1. The common general term for dryness is zào 燥 (ant. shī 濕 "wet").
2. Gǎo 槁 and kū 枯 (ant. rùn 潤 "lush") are common words referring specifically to dryness of trees and sometimes other plants.
3. Hé/hào 涸 (ant. mǎn 滿 "full of water") views dryness as the result of a process of dissication.
4. Gān 乾 (ant. shī 濕 "wet") focusses on the striking and complete absence of liquid.
5. Jié 渴 merely emphasises insufficient water supply or exhaustion of water supplies.
6. Jiāo 焦 adds to the notion of dryness that of exceesive heat.
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- WITHER
1. The current general word for anything drying up or withering down, also anything like fish which because of lack of water starts rotting, is kū 枯 (ant. rùn 潤 "moist and lush" and róng 榮 "flourish and thrive").
2. Gǎo 槁 refers specifically to the withering of plants, or to their withered state. The combination kū gǎo 枯槁 is idiomatic.
3. Wěi 萎 (ant. shèng 盛 "rich and flourishing") refers to plants (and in a transferred usually permanent sense male sexual organs!) shrivilling up and drying out.
4. Diāo 凋 (ant. mào 茂 "be flourishing") refers to whole plants withering and losing their leaves as a result, but the word may also refer to the loss of leaved because of frost.
5. Luò 落 refers abstractly and colourlessly to trees losing their leaves.
6. Líng 零 refers in a more dramatic way to plants other than trees losing their leaves.
- Word relations
- Subject: (DRY)苗/SPROUT
- Assoc: (DRY)枯 / 枯㱠/DRY
Gǎo 槁 and kū 枯 (ant. rùn 潤 "lush") are common words referring specifically to dryness of trees and sometimes other plants.