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According to my sources 饣 means "food" or "eat". Since when do people eat jewelry?

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2 Answers

TL;DR : is the phonetic, not the signific.

, which is simplified from , is the radical of / only in the sense that it is listed that way in a Chinese dictionary. It is not the meaning-bearing part of the character. Here are two possible analyses. In both cases, is contributing to the pronunciation, not the meaning:

飾 = 食 (phonetic: shi2) + 布 (signific: cloth)

飾 = 飤 (phonetic: si4) + 巾 (signific: cloth)

The former analysis might seem more plausible, given the character's present appearance, but if you look at the seal script forms for 飾 and for 布, you'll see that the right side of doesn't really look much like . It looks like underneath a -like fragment.

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I never thought about it this way. Have always accepted that it had the 'food' radical just because. Interesting insight. – deutschZuid Mar 13 at 21:11

According to zdic.net, 饰 is formed of 巾, 人, and 食 (饣). 食 (饣) is the sound component, while the other portion suggests the meaning.

The dictionary explains the character's components this way: 形声。从巾,从人,食声。人佩巾有装饰作用。 So, it's a 'pictophonetic' character which signifies a person wearing or adorned with a cloth, thus having the effect of decoration.

If you're interested in this kind of composition theory, you can look up more on the various ways characters were composed. 形声 being one of the ways.

Zdic.net is great for this kind of thing. When you look up a character or word you can click 详细解释 for more in-depth info. Yellowbridge is also decent for this kind of question.

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