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How to say "sheep" in ancient Chinese?

A sheep is a sheep.

Sheep is an ideogram in Oracle Bone Inscriptions, but you can't draw it here. If combined with glyphs, it can probably be understood that there are two horns on the head, so the word sheep has a long history and is inherited from an ancient word. So sheep is still a sheep in ancient Chinese.

Like a pig, it is called a tapir, because the word "tapir" in Oracle Bone Inscriptions is also a hieroglyph. Imagine the side of a pig from the shape of a tapir. Later, in order to distinguish, the word "moon" was added to the tapir, which became "dolphin", which means pig. What's left in Japanese? For example, you can now eat noodles called dolphin bone Lamian Noodles in Ajisen Lamian Noodles, which is actually pig bone soup Lamian Noodles ~ Chinese characters have been evolving in history and were later written as pigs. . . I don't remember how this evolved. . .

Anyway, in general, I just read a word from Oracle Bone Inscriptions ~