ε•«

Meta:

  1. ε•« is a very uncommon character.
  2. ε•« has 1 dictionary entry.
  3. ε•« appears as a character in 3 words.
  4. ε•« appears as a component in 0 characters.

Decomposition:

Once :
ε•« => 口, θ€…
Radical :
ε•« => 口 (mouth), 耂 (old), ζ—₯ (sun/day)
Graphical :
ε•« => 口, 耂, 口, δΈ€

Pinyin & Meaning:

  1. zhe3 - particle used for interjection (Cantonese)/see also ε•«ε“©[zhe3 li1]

Pronunciation Clues:

  1. Pronunciation clue for ε•« (zhe3): The component θ€… is pronounced as 'zhe3'. It has the exact same pronunciation as the character.

Example Words:

High Frequency

Medium Frequency

ε•«ε“©Β 
ε•«ε–±Β 

ε“©

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Meta:

  1. ε“© is the 1946th most frequent character.
  2. ε“© has 3 dictionary entries.
  3. ε“© appears as a character in 5 words.
  4. ε“© appears as a component in 0 characters.

Decomposition:

Once :
ε“© => 口, ι‡Œ
Radical :
ε“© => 口 (mouth), ι‡Œ (village/mile)
Graphical :
ε“© => 口, 冂, δΈ€, δΈ¨, δΈ€, δΈ€, δΈ¨, δΈ€

Pinyin & Meaning:

  1. li1 - this (Cantonese)/see also ε‘’[ni1]/see also ε“©ε“©ηΎ…ηΎ…|ε“©ε“©η½—η½—[li1 li1 luo1 luo1]
  2. li3 - mile (unit of length equal to 1,609.344 m)/old form of modern θ‹±ι‡Œ[ying1 li3]
  3. li5 - (modal final particle similar to ε‘’[ne5] or 啦[la5])

Pronunciation Clues:

  1. Pronunciation clue for ε“© (li1): The component ι‡Œ is pronounced as 'li3'. It has the same pronunciation as the character, but differs on tone.
  2. Pronunciation clue for ε“© (li1): The component ι‡Œ is pronounced as 'li3'. It has the same pronunciation as the character, but differs on tone.
  3. Pronunciation clue for ε“© (li3): The component ι‡Œ is pronounced as 'li3'. It has the exact same pronunciation as the character.
  4. Pronunciation clue for ε“© (li3): The component ι‡Œ is pronounced as 'li3'. It has the exact same pronunciation as the character.
  5. Pronunciation clue for ε“© (li5): The component ι‡Œ is pronounced as 'li3'. It has the same pronunciation as the character, but differs on tone.
  6. Pronunciation clue for ε“© (li5): The component ι‡Œ is pronounced as 'li3'. It has the same pronunciation as the character, but differs on tone.

Example Words:

High Frequency

ε“©Β 

Medium Frequency

ε’–ε“©Β 
ε•«ε“©Β 
Decomposition Levels:
Level 1: Only divided once. So only two components.
Level 2: Radical Decomposition. The character gets decomposed into its lowest radical components. For the complete list visit the Radical wikipedia page.
Level 3: Graphical Decomposition. Shows all the strokes & lowest level of components that make up the character.
If you see questions marks or too many "block" characters, especially when it comes to level 3 decomposition you might need the correct font.