Recently after I've happened to come across the component 倝 (gàn; sunrise, dawn) (Baxter-Sagart OC: *[k]ˤar-s), I was curious about the left component, or 龺, since I've also seen this component in other characters such as 朝 (cháo; dynasty/zhāo; morning) (Baxter-Sagart OC: *m-taw or *taw) and 翰 (hàn; writing brush, pen, pencil) (Baxter-Sagart OC: *[g]ˤar, *[g]ˤar-s or *m-kˤar-s).
However though when looking up the origin for this component, I came across three possible explanations.
The ones being are:
- Pictograph of the sun (日) rising through the grass (originally either two or four 屮 components, now written as two 十 components).
- Abbreviation of 倝.
- Variation of 卓.
I think I understand that 龺 is not, in terms of etymology, related to 卓 since im assuming it is grouped that way since 卓 looks similar to 龺.
So maybe if I can get some clarification here, what is the true glyph origin for the component 龺? Is this component just an abbreviation of 倝 or is this a pictograph character?
(Also just a note, I've added the Baxter-Sagart old Chinese pronunciations just to see if any characters with that exact component is related at all to each other and looks like both 朝 and 翰 seem to not be related at all. However though both 倝 and 翰 seem to share similar pronunciations. I'm still a bit confused though on the usage of the component here.)