Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - Excuse me, what is the seal in the picture?

Excuse me, what is the seal in the picture?

This is an ancient seal script. Because it is a calligraphy seal cutting work, it has the comprehensive meaning of glyph, but it is definitely not the word "Cai Mao".

The reasons are as follows (explain the following text first):

The word below is "Tong". See Shuo Wen Jie Zi. The word "child" is

That doesn't mean anything. However, please refer to the ancient prose samples with the word "Tong" in the six countries.

、 ,

Goodbye "Tong"

、 ? 、? ,

"Same" Oracle Bone Inscriptions sample

It can be clearly known that the word must be the same, and there is no other solution.

Look at the first word, the upper part is three inverted triangles, and there are three identical glyphs in Xiao Zhuan to represent the situation of a word, such as Yi (Star), Yi (Stack), Shen (Reference), Insect (Worm) and Yi (Morning). The lower part seems to have "ear" on the left and "you" on the right, but the fonts that are suspected of "ear" here are actually "moon" (sound: meat) and "evening". The upper part of the word "stack" consists of three "you" (traditional "tuo", the upper part has three "fields"; Shuowen is "on the crystal"). Samples of ancient Chinese prose in six countries? .

Again? Sample,

It can be seen that the three "days" in the first half of the sentence are the same as the three "you" and three "fields" in the previous words, that is, Shuowen is an overlapping type. Two parallel "Xi" are in the lower half. Two overlapping "Xi", namely "Gemini". The word "overlap" in prose is "suitable for crystal", and the word "suitable" in prose is like: Yan Wen.

Again? ,

Ancient prose of six countries? 、

,

Jin Wen? ,

Yes, as evidence. It can also be seen that the ancient prose samples of the six countries are "stacked":

.

Like what? ,

The glyph can explain the "you" on the right in the lower half of the picture, which is the left "hand" in the left half of the word.

To sum up, whether the word "Xie Tong" in the picture is a real person's name, its background and historical origin need to be verified.

Another one:

When explaining ancient Chinese characters, please look at the problem with the attitude of scholars. If you get some wrong explanations, you will be laughed at if you say anything casually. If you can, I suggest you buy a story-telling book. It's easy to get started and learn more knowledge. Why not?

One more thing: because of inserting pictures, the text typesetting is not beautiful. If you can't see clearly, you can discuss it in private (is that okay? Only post bar has this function? ), my typesetting ability is limited, please forgive me.