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interjection #9,578

Meanings

  1. 1 cackling sound
  2. 2 a spinning top (toy whittled at both ends)

Examples

Yì qún dàyàn gágá de fēi guò.
A flock of wild geese flew over, cackling all the way.
Háizimen zài yuànzi lǐ dǎ mù gágá.
The kids are playing with a wooden spinning top in the yard.

Tips

usage
The second-tone gá is a louder, drawn-out cackle (a goose, a forced laugh) and also writes a children's toy, a short stick whittled to a point at each end, the same thing as . For the brief, sharp everyday sound use the gā reading.

Components

radical
kǒu
mouth
Three-stroke mouth radical on the left, the indexing radical. is onomatopoeia for a sharp creak or squawk: a duck's quack, a door's creak, a sudden snap. The mouth radical signals sound-from-the-body, as in , , .
phonetic
jiá
to tap; halberd (here phonetic)
Right side supplies the sound, jiá shifting to gā through a regular j/g alternation in colloquial readings. originally named a small halberd and by extension the tap of metal on metal, so the phonetic also brings a sonic echo that fits the onomatopoeia.

Stroke Order