Radical 87 Explained

Uni:722A
Meaning:claw
Pny:zhǎo/zhuǎ
Bopo:ㄓㄠˇ/ㄓㄨㄚˇ
Wade:chao3/chua3
Jyutping:zaau2
Yale:jáau
Poj:jiáu
Cn:(爫) 爪字頭/爪字头 zhǎozìtóu/zhuǎzìtóu
Onyomi:ソウ sō
Kunyomi:つめ tsume
Jp:爪/つめ tsume
爪繞/そうにょう sōnyō
(爫) 爪冠/つめかんむり tsumekanmuri
(爫) 爪頭/つめがしら tsumegashira
(爫) ノツ冠/のつかんむり notsukanmuri
Hang:손톱 sontop
Hanja:조 cho

Radical 87 or radical claw meaning "claw", "nail" or "talon" is one of the 34 Kangxi radicals (214 radicals total) composed of 4 strokes.

In the Kangxi Dictionary there are 36 characters (out of 49,030) to be found under this radical.

is also the 86th indexing component in the Table of Indexing Chinese Character Components predominantly adopted by Simplified Chinese dictionaries published in mainland China, with being its associated indexing component.

Derived characters

Strokes Characters
+0 Component only
+4
+5
+6 SC (= -> )
+8
+10
+11
+14

Variant forms

There is a design nuance between the form of in different typefaces. In mainland China standard, the starting point of the third and fourth strokes of are joined with the first stroke, while in Taiwan's Standard Form of National Characters, they are detached. This difference may apply to both printing typefaces and handwriting forms, and usually both are acceptable.

JoinedDetached

The upper component form also has variant forms in different regions. Traditionally, the second and fourth strokes point outwards in printing typefaces but point inwards in handwriting . In mainland China's xinzixing (new typeface), some were replaced by (a variant form of the radical 刀), e.g. ->, while the others were altered their form to imitate the handwriting form, e.g. -> ; These changes also apply to traditional Chinese characters, e.g. ->, -> . Similar change were also adopted in Japanese jōyō kanji (commonly used Chinese characters), e.g. ->, while the forms of kyūjitai and hyōgai kanji were left unchanged, e.g. (=), . In Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau where Traditional Chinese is used, is adopted as the standard form, though both forms are commonly used in publication.

Pointing inwardsPointing outwards
Traditional handwriting
Mainland China new typeface
Hong Kong & Taiwan standard
Japan jōyō kanji
Traditional typefaces
Mainland China old typeface
Hong Kong & Taiwan old typeface
Japan hyōgai kanji
Korea

Literature

External links