What does qi mean?

Qi means: beautiful jade or rare treasure.

Pinyin: qí.

Five strokes: gadw.

Radical: Wang.

Stroke: 12.

Analysis: Qi is the standard secondary word in modern Chinese, and its pronunciation in Putonghua is qí, which was first seen in the official script of Han Dynasty and belongs to pictophonetic characters in Liu Shu. The basic meaning of "qi" is beautiful jade; The extended meaning is relatively rare, such as Qihua Yaocao.

Make sentences

1, Xiaoming dreamed that he was in the sky, and the fairy Chang 'e took him to the Moon Palace. He saw the ground covered with beautiful flowers and herbs.

2. The golden nail saves the jade household, the colorful phoenix dances the Zhumen, the golden que and the silver luanhe Zifu, the seven flowers and the Yao grass, and the Qiongpa.

3, Seven Flowers and Yao Grass, Yingying Yu Yan, the ever-changing scenery makes these two people intoxicated.

4, Yushu Qionglin 300 miles, Qihua Yaocao a spring.

5. Golden Que, Jubilee and Zifu, exotic flowers and herbs, exotic flowers and exotic herbs.

6. Golden Que, Jubilee and Zifu, Seven Flowers Yao Grass and Qiongpa.

7. In the city, the golden lanterns and jade rivets are Long Feifeng, with colorful gold plating. On both sides of Shinto, there are all kinds of Shenmu immortals, vines and Mo Long, and the exotic flowers and herbs are fragrant and pleasant.

8. Beauty Lang Cai Qihua's kind words of cutting moths with demon grass.

9. Thirteen lost magic treasures are coming again. Those rare flowers and plants can be said to stir up a thousand waves with a stone in the Wulin of the Central Plains, but after beautiful things, there must be a newly-established legal organization, and the six are mottled.

10. At this time, on the Buddhist sending Dojo outside the Leiyin Temple in Lingjiu Fairy Mountain, the fairy fog curled up, surrounded by giant cypresses, standing in the forest, and those flowers and plants were fragrant.