Taxonomy of meanings for 旁:
- 旁 páng (OC: baaŋ MC: bɑŋ) 步光切 平 廣韻:【爾雅曰二達謂之岐旁謂岐道旁出也説文曰薄也 】
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EVERYWHERE
- nadVon all sides, everywhere
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HELP
- n[adN]helper by one's side
- NEAR
- nsubjectthose who are close to and beside
- SIDE
- nside, place beside something or someone
- nadNfigurativeon-the-side-, irregularly added
- nadVsideways, towards the side 旁出
- npost-Nside (of a road, roadside); one's side 身邊
- n(post-N)on the side ofCH
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EVERYWHERE
Additional information about 旁
說文解字:
- Criteria
- SIDE
1. The current general word for the the place beside a person, a road, a river or anything else is páng 旁 and this word can occur after demonstrative pronouns like 其.
2. Cè 側 refers to anything that is beside something upright, like a building or a standing person, and the word can also be used independently unmodified by a preceding explicit indication of place..
- CROSSROADS
1. Qú 衢 refers generally to an intersection of roads, either in a city or in the countryside, from which one can move in four or more directions, once in CC even nine directions.
2. Chōng 衝 refers to such an intersection especially as a centre of communications.
3. Jiē 街 is sometimes used to refer to a cross-road within a city.
ERYA 一達謂之道路;二達謂之歧旁;三達謂之劇旁;四達謂之衢;五達謂之康;六達謂之莊;七達謂之劇驂;八達謂之崇期;九達謂之逵。 is a wonderful example of rationalisation in lexicography.
- ANSWER
[ASCENDING/HORIZONTAL/DESCENDING]
[COMMON/RARE]
[FAST/SLOW]
1. The dominant general word for responding to something that has been addressed to one is duì 對 (converse wèi 謂 "address"), but that word usually refers to a reply directed at a superior who has put a question or occasionally a response to a statement by a superior.
[ASCENDING], [GENERAL]
2. Dá 答 (ant. jīn 吟 ( 口字旁加金字 ) 而不答 "not answer") refers to an immediate unpremeditated reply.
[ASCENDING], [FAST]
3. Yìng 應 (ant. 喑 "keep quiet") is to come up with an immediate reaction of which the linguistic reply is a central part.
[FAST]; [[RARE]]
4. Chóu 酬 can occasionally refer to a polite formal reply.
[FORMAL], [POLITE]; [[RARE]]
- SLIM
1. The most current general word for skinniness is probably jí 瘠 / 膌 (ant. féi 肥 "fat").
2. Qú 臞 (ant. rǎng 壤 [ 肉字旁 ]) refers to skinniness in humans.
3. Léi 羸 refers to skinniness as a result of famine or of disease.
4. Shòu 瘦 is rare in pre-Buddhist times, and refers generally to emaciation.