拡
Appearance
|
Translingual
[edit]Traditional | 擴 |
---|---|
Shinjitai | 拡 |
Simplified | 扩 |
Han character
[edit]拡 (Kangxi radical 64, 手+5, 8 strokes, cangjie input 手戈戈 (QII), composition ⿰扌広)
References
[edit]- Kangxi Dictionary: not present, would follow page 427, character 16
- Dai Kanwa Jiten: character 11985
- Dae Jaweon: page 776, character 12
- Hanyu Da Zidian (first edition): not present, would follow volume 3, page 1857, character 2
- Unihan data for U+62E1
Chinese
[edit]For pronunciation and definitions of 拡 – see 擴 (“to expand; to enlarge; to stretch”). (This character is a variant form of 擴). |
Japanese
[edit]拡 | |
擴 |
Kanji
[edit]拡
(Sixth grade kyōiku kanji, shinjitai kanji, kyūjitai form 擴)
Readings
[edit]- Go-on: かく (kaku, Jōyō)
- Kan-on: かく (kaku, Jōyō)
- Kun: ひろがる (hirogaru, 拡がる)、ひろげる (hirogeru, 拡げる)、ひろめる (hiromeru)
Compounds
[edit]Categories:
- CJK Unified Ideographs block
- Han script characters
- CJKV characters simplified differently in Japan and China
- Translingual lemmas
- Translingual symbols
- Chinese lemmas
- Mandarin lemmas
- Cantonese lemmas
- Hakka lemmas
- Eastern Min lemmas
- Hokkien lemmas
- Teochew lemmas
- Wu lemmas
- Middle Chinese lemmas
- Old Chinese lemmas
- Chinese hanzi
- Mandarin hanzi
- Cantonese hanzi
- Hakka hanzi
- Eastern Min hanzi
- Hokkien hanzi
- Teochew hanzi
- Wu hanzi
- Middle Chinese hanzi
- Old Chinese hanzi
- Chinese terms spelled with 拡
- Chinese variant forms
- Japanese kanji
- Japanese sixth grade kanji
- Japanese kyōiku kanji
- Japanese jōyō kanji
- Japanese kanji with goon reading かく
- Japanese kanji with kan'on reading かく
- Japanese kanji with kun reading ひろ・がる
- Japanese kanji with kun reading ひろ・げる
- Japanese kanji with kun reading ひろめる