臣 | ||||
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臣 (U+81E3) "minister, official" | ||||
Pronunciations | ||||
Pinyin: | chén | |||
Bopomofo: | ㄔㄣˊ | |||
Gwoyeu Romatzyh: | chern | |||
Wade–Giles: | chʻên2 | |||
Cantonese Yale: | sàhn | |||
Jyutping: | san4 | |||
JapaneseKana: | シン shin / ジン jin (on'yomi) おみ omi (kun'yomi) | |||
Sino-Korean: | 신 sin | |||
Names | ||||
Japanese name(s): | 臣/しん shin | |||
Hangul: | 신하 sinha | |||
Stroke order animation | ||||
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Radical 131 orradical minister (臣部) meaning"minister" or"official" is one of the 29Kangxi radicals (214 radicals in total) composed of 6strokes.
In theKangxi Dictionary, there are 16 characters (out of 49,030) to be found under thisradical.
臣 is also the 125th indexing component in theTable of Indexing Chinese Character Components predominantly adopted bySimplified Chinese dictionaries published inmainland China.
Strokes | Characters |
---|---|
+0 | 臣 |
+2 | 臤臥 |
+6 | 臦 |
+8 | 臧 |
+11 | 臨臩 |
As an independent sinogram it is aChinese character. It is one of theKyōiku kanji or Kanji taught in elementary school inJapan.[1] It is a fourth grade kanji.[1]