See also: and

U+7114, 焔
CJK UNIFIED IDEOGRAPH-7114

[U+7113]
CJK Unified Ideographs
[U+7115]

Translingual

Han character

(Kangxi radical 86, +8 in Chinese, 火+7 in Japanese, 12 strokes in Chinese, 11 strokes in Japanese, cangjie input 火弓中日 (FNLA), four-corner 97860, composition )

  1. flame, blaze
  2. glowing, blazing

References

  • Kangxi Dictionary: not present, would follow page 673, character 11
  • Hanyu Da Zidian (first edition): not present, would follow volume 3, page 2205, character 7
  • Unihan data for U+7114

Chinese

For pronunciation and definitions of – see (“flame”).
(This character is a variant form of ).

Japanese

Shinjitai
(extended)

Kyūjitai

Kanji

(uncommon “Hyōgai” kanji, shinjitai kanji, kyūjitai form )

  1. Extended shinjitai form of

Readings

Compounds

  • (せい)(えん) (seien)
  • (どく)(えん) (dokuen)
  • (れい)(えん) (reien)

Usage notes

In modern Japanese, is mostly replaced by , due to the deprecation of non-tōyō kanji caused by the Japanese script reform.

Japanese terms with 焔 replaced by daiyōji 炎

Etymology

For pronunciation and definitions of – see the following entry.
ほのおS
[noun] a flame
[noun] (figuratively) an intense emotion, passion
Alternative spellings
,
ほむらS
[noun] a flame
[noun] (figuratively) an intense emotion, passion
Alternative spellings
,
えんS
[affix] flame, blaze
[affix] (figurative) passion, emotion
Alternative spellings
,
(This term, , is an alternative spelling of the above term.)

Korean

Hanja

• (yeon) (hangeul , revised yeon, McCuneReischauer yŏn, Yale yen)

  1. This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text {{rfdef}}.
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