Knowledge, insight, knowledge, courage, prejudice, opinion, love at first sight, poverty, rank, foresight, insight, insight.
Ji 'an (pinyin: Ji 'an, Xi 'an) is a first-class word (commonly used word) in the General Standard of Chinese. This word first appeared in Shang Oracle Bone Inscriptions and Shang inscriptions. Its ancient glyph highlights the eyes above the human body to emphasize seeing. Its original meaning is to see, to see, especially to look up. When used as a noun, express an opinion.
In its original meaning, "seeing" means touching and meeting, seeing and appearing, and meeting and meeting. The meaning of presentation was originally expressed by "seeing" and later changed to "now". "Jian" is also used as an auxiliary word in ancient Chinese, which means passive and is equivalent to "Bei".
Trace the source of words:
Know words. The word "see" in Oracle Bone Inscriptions is shaped like a kneeling person at the lower part, and the big eyes ("eyes") with special emphasis at the upper part indicate the head-up front. The original meaning of "look" is to look straight ahead.
In the early years of the Western Zhou Dynasty, inscriptions on bronze still maintained Oracle Bone Inscriptions's way of reading characters. Judging from the bronze inscriptions in the middle of the Western Zhou Dynasty, the human figure at the bottom of the word has changed shape, but the "eye" on it is still very pictographic. By the end of the Western Zhou Dynasty, the characters in the inscriptions on bronze inscriptions had become almost the same as those in the seal script of Qin and Han Dynasties, and the eyes became oblique and vertical, and the human body became a standing posture, from which the characters in Xiao Zhuan Jie Zi came.
Later, with Biography as the basic text, the character "Er" under "Mu" was further written. This developed into regular script. After simplifying Chinese characters, it will be "?" According to cursive script. Simplified to "see".