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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 References  





2 External links  














Yupian






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Ming dynasty 1492 reprint of the Yupian
Vol. 27 of the YupianinIshiyama-dera, Ōtsu, Japan (facsimile)

The Yupian (Chinese: 玉篇; pinyin: Yùpiān; Wade–Giles: Yü-p'ien; "Jade Chapters") is a c. 543 Chinese dictionary edited by Gu Yewang (顧野王; Ku Yeh-wang; 519–581) during the Liang dynasty. It arranges 12,158 character entries under 542 radicals, which differ somewhat from the original 540 in the Shuowen Jiezi. Each character entry gives a fanqie pronunciation gloss and a definition, with occasional annotation.

The Yupian is a significant work in the history of Written Chinese. It is the first major extant dictionary in the four centuries since the completion of Shuowen and records thousands of new characters that had been introduced into the language in the interim. It is also important for documenting nonstandard súzì (俗字, "popular written forms of characters"), many of which were adopted in the 20th century as official simplified Chinese characters. For instance, the Yupian records that wàn (traditional , "ten thousand, myriad") had a popular form of (simplified ), which is much easier to write with three strokes versus thirteen.[1]

Baxter describes the textual history:

The original Yùpiān was a large and unwieldy work of thirty juàn ["volumes; fascicles"], and during Táng and Sòng various abridgements and revisions of it were made, which often altered the original fănqiè spellings; of the original version only fragments remain (some two thousand entries out of a reported original total of 16,917), and the currently-available version of the Yùpiān is not a reliable guide to Early Middle Chinese phonology.[2]

In 760, during the Tang dynasty, Sun Jiang (孫強; Sun Chiang) compiled a Yupian edition, which he noted had a total of 51,129 words, less than a third of the original 158,641. In 1013, Song dynasty scholar Chen Pengnian (陳彭年; Ch'en P'eng-nien) published a revised Daguang yihui Yupian (大廣益會玉篇; "Expanded and enlarged Jade Chapters"). The Japanese monk Kūkai brought an original version Yupian back from China in 806, and modified it into his c. 830 Tenrei Banshō Meigi, which is the oldest extant Japanese dictionary.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Creamer 1992, p. 116.
  • ^ Baxter 1992, pp. 40–41.
  • External links[edit]

    Dictionaries for scripts using Chinese characters

    Monolingual

    Characters
    (; )

  • Erya 爾雅 (c. 3rd century BC)
  • Cangjiepian 倉頡篇 (c. 220 BC)
  • Jijiupian 急就篇 (c. 40 BC)
  • Shuowen Jiezi 說文解字 (2nd century)
  • Shiming 釋名 (c. 200)
  • Guangya 廣雅 (c. 230)
  • Xiao Erya 小爾雅 (3rd century)
  • Zilin 字林 (c. 350)
  • Ziyuan 字苑 (c. 4th century)
  • Yupian 玉篇 (c. 543)
  • Ganlu Zishu 干祿字書 (c. 7th century)
  • Leipian 類篇 (1066)
  • Piya 埤雅 (c. 11th century)
  • Zitong 字通 (1254)
  • Zihui 字彙 (1615)
  • Zhengzitong 正字通 (1627)
  • Kangxi Dictionary 康熙字典 (1716)
  • Shuowen Jiezi Zhu 說文解字注 (1815)
  • Zhonghua Da Zidian 中華大字典 (1915)
  • Xinhua Dictionary 新华字典 (1957)
  • Hanyu Da Zidian 漢語大字典 (1989)
  • Zhonghua Zihai 中华字海 (1994)
  • Words
    (; )

  • Ministry of Education Mandarin Chinese Dictionary 教育部國語辭典 (1926)
  • Cihai 辭海 (1938)
  • Zhongwen Da Cidian 中文大辭典 (1968)
  • Xiandai Hanyu Cidian 现代汉语词典 (1978)
  • Hanyu Da Cidian 漢語大詞典 (1994)
  • Xiandai Hanyu Guifan Cidian 现代汉语规范词典 (2004)
  • Rime

  • Qieyun 切韻 (601)
  • Kanmiu Buque Qieyun 刊謬補缺切韻 (706)
  • Tangyun 唐韻 (732)
  • Yunhai jingyuan 韻海鏡源 (780)
  • Guangyun 廣韻 (1008)
  • Jiyun 集韻 (1037)
  • Yunjing 韻鏡 (1161)
  • Qiyin lüe 七音略 (before 1161)
  • Pingshui Yun 平水韻 (c. 12th century)
  • Menggu Ziyun 蒙古字韻 (14th century)
  • Zhongyuan Yinyun 中原音韻 (1324)
  • Qi Lin Bayin 戚林八音 (17th century)
  • Peiwen Yunfu 佩文韻府 (1711)
  • Varieties

  • Great Dictionary of Modern Chinese Dialects 現代漢語方言大詞典 (2002)
  • Exegetical

  • Yiqiejing Yinyi (Xuanying) 一切經音義 (玄英) (c. 649)
  • Yiqiejing Yinyi (Huilin) 一切經音義 (慧琳) (c. 807)
  • Longkan Shoujian 龍龕手鑒 (997)
  • Biographical

    Bilingual

    Chinese–English

  • Medhurst's Chinese and English Dictionary (1842)
  • A Syllabic Dictionary of the Chinese Language (1874)
  • A Chinese–English Dictionary (1892)
  • The Five Thousand Dictionary (1926)
  • Mathews' Chinese–English Dictionary (1931)
  • Concise Dictionary of Spoken Chinese (1947)
  • Grammata Serica Recensa (1957)
  • Lin Yutang's Chinese-English Dictionary of Modern Usage (1972)
  • ABC Chinese–English Dictionary (1996)
  • Online

    In other languages

  • Pentaglot Dictionary (Manchu; 1794)
  • Dai Kan-Wa Jiten (Japanese; 1960)
  • Le Grand Ricci (French; 2001)
  • Han-Han Dae Sajeon (Korean)
  • List of Chinese dictionaries


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