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Radical 100 or radical life () meaning "life" is one of the 23 Kangxi radicals (214 radicals in total) composed of 5 Stroke (CJK character), strokes. In the ''Kangxi Dictionary'', there are 22 characters (out of 49,030) to be found under this Radical (Chinese characters), radical. is also the 109th indexing component in the ''Table of Indexing Chinese Character Components'' predominantly adopted by Simplified Chinese characters, Simplified Chinese dictionaries published in mainland China. Evolution File:生-oracle.svg, Oracle bone script character File:生-bronze.svg, Chinese bronze inscriptions, Bronze script character File:生-bigseal.svg, Large seal script character File:生-seal.svg, Small seal script character Derived characters Sinogram The radical is also used as an independent Chinese character. It is one of the kyōiku kanji or kanji taught in elementary school in Japan. It is a first grade kanji. The character alone is present in the phrase worship of the livi ...
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Worship Of The Living
Worship of the living () is the worship of living people practiced in the East Asian cultural sphere. In China, it is practiced at ''sheng'' shrines (Chinese: 生祠, shēng Ci shrine, cí). There are two types of enshrinement: the enshrinement of the spirit of a living person who has made a significant contribution, and the enshrinement of one's own spirit. Owing to its usage by Wei Zhongxian, the practice became seen as a sign of corruption and declined in China. In Japan, the practice was most prominent with the worship of the Emperor of Japan, emperor during the period of the imperial State Shinto from the late 19th century until 1945. In China When Han dynasty#Western Han, Former Han's Reunobu was the prime minister of Yan Kingdom (Han dynasty), Yan, he built his shrine between Yan and Qi (state), Qi and called it the "Reun Gong Shrine". Also, when was the prime minister of Qi, the Qi people built the "Shiqing Shrine". This is the beginning of the birth shrine. In the T ...
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Kyōiku Kanji
The are kanji which Japanese elementary school students should learn from first through sixth grade. Also known as , these kanji are listed on the . The table is developed and maintained by the Japanese Ministry of Education (MEXT). Although the list is designed for Japanese students, it can also be used as a sequence of learning characters by non-native speakers as a means of focusing on the most commonly used kanji. kanji are a subset (1,026) of the 2,136 characters of kanji. Versions of the list *1946 created with 881 characters *1977 expanded to 996 characters *1989 expanded to 1,006 characters *2017 expanded to 1,026 characters **The following 20 characters, all used in prefecture names, were added in 2017. ** ( Ibaraki), ( Ehime), ( Shizuoka, Okayama and Fukuoka), ( Niigata), ( Gifu), ( Kumamoto), ( Kagawa), ( Saga), ( Saitama), ( Nagasaki and Miyazaki), ( Shiga), ( Kagoshima), ( Okinawa), ( Fukui), ( Okinawa), ( Tochigi), ( Kanagawa and Nara), ...
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Kangxi Radicals
The ''Kangxi'' radicals (), also known as ''Zihui'' radicals, are a set of 214 radicals that were collated in the 18th-century '' Kangxi Dictionary'' to aid categorization of Chinese characters. They are primarily sorted by stroke count. They are the most popular system of radicals for dictionaries that order characters by radical and stroke count. They are encoded in Unicode alongside other CJK characters, under the block "Kangxi radicals", while graphical variants are included in the block "CJK Radicals Supplement". Originally introduced in the ''Zihui'' dictionary of 1615, they are more commonly referred to in relation to the 1716 ''Kangxi Dictionary''—''Kangxi'' being the commissioning emperor's Chinese era name, era name. The 1915 encyclopedic word dictionary ''Ciyuan'' also uses this system. In modern times, many dictionaries that list Traditional Chinese head characters continue to use this system, for example the ''Wang Li (linguist), Wang Li Character Dictionary of ...
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