shèng / chéng
noun #2,691

Meanings

  1. 1 (archaic) four-horse military chariot
  2. 2 (archaic) classifier for war-chariots; four
  3. 3 (literary) historical record; chronicle

Examples

Qiānshèngzhīguó shì gǔdài qiángguó de dàimíngcí.
A state with a thousand chariots is the classical byword for a great power.
Dàshèng fójiào cóng Yìndù jīngguò Zhōngyà chuánrù Zhōngguó.
Mahayana Buddhism spread from India through Central Asia into China.
Dìfāng shǐshèng wèi lìshǐxuéjiā bǎocún le bǎoguì de zīliào.
Local chronicles preserve precious sources for historians.

Tips

history
In pre-Qin texts, one was a four-horse war-chariot, the standard unit for measuring military power: a 千乘之国 ("thousand-chariot state") was a major kingdom, and a 万乘 state referred to the Zhou royal house. By extension also came to mean 'four' as a number, and later 'historical record' — a chariot-load of events worth chronicling.
register
The shèng reading is purely classical/literary and survives almost only in fixed compounds: Buddhist 大乘 (Mahayana), 小乘 (Hinayana), the chengyu-style 千乘之国, and the bookish 史乘. Modern colloquial speech uses chéng for everything else.

Components

ideograph
shèng
to ride; to multiply; vehicle
Single fused unit of ten interleaved strokes — the modern shape overlays cursive residues onto a -like body so historical components no longer separate cleanly. Best learned as the silhouette behind 乘车, 乘客, and 乘法. Filed under Kangxi #4 丿 by tradition, with no visible radical-element in the modern form.

Filed under radical 丿 (piě, #4) by convention. 丿 is not a separate component in , so no strokes are highlighted.

Stroke Order

shèng