yáo
noun

Meanings

  1. 1 line of a divinatory trigram or hexagram (in the Yijing)
  2. 2 (literary) to interlace; to crisscross

Examples

《 Yìjīng 》 zhōng měi yī guà yóu liù yáo zǔchéng.
In the Book of Changes, each hexagram is made of six lines.
Yáng yáo hé yīn yáo dàibiǎo liǎng zhǒng jīběn lìliàng.
Yang lines and yin lines represent two fundamental forces.

Tips

culture
is the building block of the 八卦 (bāguà, eight trigrams) and 六十 (sixty-four hexagrams) in the 《易经》. A solid line is (yáng yáo); a broken line is (yīn yáo). Stacking six gives one hexagram.
history
Almost all modern uses are tied to 易学 (Yijing studies) and divination terminology.

Components

semantic
to mow; crossed strokes
Top is a single pair of crossed strokes. Doubled with the matching pair below, the graph pictures the broken-and-solid lines stacked in a Yijing trigram — the basic divinatory unit that names.
semantic
to mow; crossed strokes
Bottom repeats the upper crossed-strokes pair. The reduplication is the entire point: is two interlocking pairs of lines, captured as 'criss-cross' in the literary verb sense, and standing for an interlaced trigram line in Yijing usage.

Radical

Trigram Lines Kangxi #89

A tiny radical group used mainly to index a handful of divination-related characters. Productivity is very low; the main reason a learner meets is via (shuǎng) and / (ěr), where it appears as a structural component rather than a meaning clue.

Used in

Showing 2 of 2 · default form 爻
shuǎng
refreshing; pleasant; invigorating · frank; straightforward
yáo
line of a divinatory trigram or hexagram (in the Yijing) · (literary) to interlace; to crisscross

Stroke Order

yáo