Taxonomy of meanings for 臭:
- 臭 chòu (OC: khjus MC: tɕʰiu) 尺救切 去 廣韻:【凡氣之揔名俗作臰尺救切二 】
Additional information about 臭
說文解字: 【臭】,禽走臭而知其迹者,犬也。从犬、从自。 〔小徐本「从犬」上有「故」。〕 【臣鉉等曰:自,古鼻字。犬走以鼻知臭,故从自。】 【尺救切】
- Criteria
- ODOUR
1. The general word for an odour, either pleasant or unpleasant, is chòu 臭.
- FLAVOUR
1. The current noun for taste is wèi 味. (The current verb for tasting something is cháng 嘗. See also TASTE).
2. Chòu 臭 is the flavour of something as primarily perceived through the nose. For this see SMELL
- FRAGRANT
1. Xiāng 香 (ant. chòu 臭 "stinking") is orginally the scent of grain, and the meaning of the word was generalised to refer to any pleasant smell, especially also that of foodstuffs. NB: chòu 臭 is often neutral in classical Chinese and can refer to pleasant as well as unpleasant smells. However, there are cases where the word clearly describes something as evil-smelling and not only refers to what actually happens to be an evil smell.
2. The general poetic term for fragrance of flowers or grasses is fāng 芳 (ant. chòu 臭 "stinking"), and the word never refers to the fragrance of any artefact.
3. Xūn 薰 refers to an almost pungent strong fragrance.
4. Fēn 芬 is a rare rather colourless term for attractive smell.
5. Xīng 馨 refers to a striking fragrance speading far and wide.
- SMELL
1. Xiù 臭/嗅 "try to smell" relates to wén 聞 "perceive the smell of" exactly like shì 視 "look at" to jiàn 見 "see".
NB: Compare 嘗 "try to taste". See TASTE.
- SAVOURY
1. The standard words for something tasting good are the archaic zhǐ 旨 and the current měi 美 (ant.** sè 澀 "not pleasant to the palate").
2. Gān 甘 refers primarily to sweetness but is often used for general tastiness of food.
3. Xiāng 香 (ant. chòu 臭 "stinking and of bad taste") refers primarily to things that smell good, but the word is often used for general tastiness of food.
4. Hòu 厚 refers the rich good taste of food.
5. Nèn 嫩 refers to food in which unpleasant hardness has been removed during the boiling so that the food is soft and tasty.
- STINK
1. The current general and abstract word for odours of all kinds, pleasant or unpleasant, is chòu 臭.
2. Xiāng 香 (ant. chòu 臭 "stench") often refers to pleasant odours and fragrance, but the word can also refer to a stench, unlike fāng 芳.
3. Xīng 腥, sāo 臊, and xīng sāo 腥臊 refers specifically to the stench of rotten pork or generally of rotten meat.
4. Shān 羶 / 膻 refers to the notorious pungent stench of goats.
5. Chòu 殠 is very rare word referring to an unpleasant smell.
See FRAGRANT
- Word relations
- Ant: (STINK)香/FRAGRANT
Xiāng 香 (ant. chòu 臭 "stinking") is orginally the scent of grain, and the meaning of the word was generalised to refer to any pleasant smell, especially also that of foodstuffs. NB: chòu 臭 is often neutral in classical Chinese and can refer to pleasant as well as unpleasant smells. However, there are cases where the word clearly describes something as evil-smelling and not only refers to what actually happens to be an evil smell. - Object: (ODOUR)聞/SMELL
- Contrast: (ODOUR)味/FLAVOUR
The current noun for taste is wèi 味. (The current verb for tasting something is cháng 嘗. See also TASTE). - Assoc: (STINK)腐/ROTTEN
The current general word for rottenness is fǔ 腐(ant. xiān 鮮 "still fresh").