dǐng
noun #20,548

Measure Word

Meanings

  1. 1 ancient bronze cauldron (ritual cooking vessel with three or four legs)
  2. 2 tripod cauldron
  3. 3 (fig.) emblem of state power

Examples

Bówùguǎn lǐ zhǎnchū le yī jiàn Shāng dài qīngtóng dǐng.
The museum displays a bronze cauldron from the Shang Dynasty.
Wèndǐng Zhōngyuán yìwèizhe zhēngduó tiānxià.
To 'question the cauldron of the Central Plains' means to contend for dominion over all of China.

Tips

culture
In ancient China, the was far more than a cooking pot — it was the supreme emblem of state power and legitimacy. The legendary Nine Tripod Cauldrons (, Jiǔ Dǐng) were said to symbolize the nine regions of China, and possession of them signified the right to rule. The phrase 问鼎 (to question the cauldron) became the idiom for challenging for supreme power. The remains one of the most iconic symbols in Chinese civilization.

Components

pictograph
dǐng
ancient bronze cauldron
is its own Kangxi radical — a complete pictograph. The upper square depicts the body and decorative ears of a three-legged ritual cauldron; the splayed strokes below picture the legs. As a self-radical it does not decompose. These cauldrons were emblems of Zhou-era state power.

Radical

Tripod Kangxi #206

A near-self-contained radical: indexes itself plus a tiny set of inscription-era variants (, ) for differently sized ritual cauldrons. The graph preserves the ear-handles, body, and three legs of the bronze vessel. Almost never appears as a productive component in modern compounds — it survives mainly through itself.

Used in

Showing 2 of 2 · default form 鼎
nài
large ritual tripod cauldron (the great ding)
dǐng
ancient bronze cauldron (ritual cooking vessel with three or four legs) · tripod cauldron

Stroke Order

dǐng