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フォントセットからグリフが欠落していると、奇妙に表示されたり、まったく表示されなかったりすることがある。東アジア言語サポートを有効にすることをお勧めする。
Glyphs missing from your font set may appear strange, or not at all. We recommend enabling East Asian language support.
JI N
Glyph elements [ Toggle Font ]
睾丸は硬くて締まった肉で、股間の石のようなものです。砂嚢も硬くて締まった筋肉の鳥類の器官で、食道を取り囲む2つの側面に分かれており、通常は鳥が飲み込んだ種子を消化するために実際にすりつぶす石が含まれています…ほとんどの人間には砂嚢はありませんが、この類推は人間にも当てはまります。「石から種子を飲み込んで消化した鳥、ひよこ」は「股間の肉を持った妾」です。戦士の従者、つまり手下も、命令されるとそうしたことがあります。
Top element of「in control, hard and tight, maintaining distance to orifice and crotch」with「meat, flesh, body part」to mean KIDNEY. Kidneys are encased in a tough, fibrous tissue for protection, keeping the organs「hard and tight.」Kidneys are「in control」of a number of vital bodily functions, namely: filtering toxins from the blood and processing urine for excretion, regulating the body's electrolytes and ions critical for a regular heartbeat and to regulate blood pressure, controlling the acid-alkaline chemical balance within the body's systems and particularly in the intestines, reabsorbing water and glucose from the colon for further use and to prevent dehydration, in addition to the production of many hormones that themselves control body processes. Kidney failure normally means that certain death is approaching for an organism. Note that kidneys are the「body part in control of crotch meat」with regard to urination also.
TESTES are hard and tight meat, rocks of the groin. GIZZARD is also a hard and tight avian organ of muscle meat with two distinct sides surrounding the esophagus that normally contains actual stones used to grind seeds for digestion that the bird has swallowed…note that most human beings do not have a gizzard, but that the analogy may apply to humans as「birds, chicks who have swallowed and digested seeds from stones」as a「concubine with crotch meat.」A warrior's page, his varlet, did that, too, when commanded.
Modern definitions (that generally disregard history) …excluding politically incorrect concepts and other meanings deemed offensive today; may list only pigeonholed definitions, euphemisms, or meaninglless mnemonics)
Chinese: kidney
Japanese: kidney
Unihan extended: kidneys; testes, gizzard
EDRDG: kidney
これらの象形文字はもともと、退屈した老人のグループが自分たちの娯楽のための下品ななぞなぞと類推を謎かけとして作ったもので
(籒を参照)
書き言葉や話し言葉としてではなく、何千年も前の中国社会を表していたことを常に念頭に置いてください。
これらの象形文字が言語としての使用を意図していたとしたら、これらのグリフが、最初は色気のないジョークやパズルだったという可能性は本当にあるのだろうか?そうです!そうだ!
古代中国ではセックスは恥ではなかった。なぜそんなものがあるのか?そして今、隠蔽工作が行われている
賢者たちはこれより悪いシステムを設計することはできなかったでしょう。これらの象形文字が中国、日本、またはその他の場所の現代生活を描写していると示唆している人は誰もいません。
このサイトでは、人ではなく象形文字の意味について説明しています。ただし、これらの象形文字は、政治的に正しくないという概念が存在するずっと前から、人を含め、さまざまなものを表しています。
答えなければならない質問は、これらの象形文字が、誰でもどこでも、言語を表現するために使用され続けるべきかどうかです。
(もっと...)
今日の人間世界がどれほどひどいものであっても、古き良き時代の方が良かったと本当に信じますか?
ところで、これらのグリフを形成するために賢者たちが何度も何度も使用した同じ要素の数は限られているため、退屈になるかもしれませんが、辞書の本質的な特性として、同じ説明を何度も見つけることを期待すべきです。
一般的に公認された定義のみを提供する他の情報源では無視されがちなグリフの二重の意味を説明している。
Always keep in mind that these glyphs were originally created by groups of bored old men as vulgar riddles and analogies for their own entertainment
(see 籒 for that)
and represented Chinese society many thousands of years ago, and not as a written or spoken language.
If these glyphs had been intended for language use, the sages could not have possibly designed a worse system.
Is it truly possible that all these glyphs started out as off-color jokes and puzzles? Yes! It is!
Sex had no shame in ancient China. Why would it? And now, there is a cover-up.
No one is suggesting these glyphs depict contemporary life in China, Japan, or anywhere else.
This site describes glyph meanings, not people.
These glyphs however, describe many and various things, including people, long before there were any notions of becoming politically incorrect.
The question to be answered is, should these glyphs continue being used, by anyone, anywhere, for expressing language?
(More...)
Despite how bad the human world is today, do you actually believe that the so-called good old days were any better? Or they could only have been worse?
By the way, with a limited number of the same elements used by the sages again and again to form these glyphs,
you should expect to find the same explanations again and again, as tedious as that may become, and as an inherent trait of any dictionary.
This site explains the dual meanings of glyphs most often ignored by other sources that provide you with only the sanctioned definition, generally.
Primal elements
Japanese vocabulary: 31 entries
Chinese usage: 11 entries
Related glyphs [ Toggle font ]
- Glyph.07224
- Strokes: 13 ~ 12
- grade_08
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This publication has included material from the MDBG free online English to Chinese dictionary files in accordance with the license provisions of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License.
This publication has included material from the JMdict (EDICT, etc.) dictionary files in accordance with the license provisions of the Electronic Dictionaries Research Group.
This publication has included material from the Unicode Character Database. Copyright © 1991-2016 Unicode, Inc. All rights reserved. Distributed under these Terms of Use.