First, interpret the treasure.
1, precious thing: national treasure.
2, precious: nod.
3. An ancient gambling tool, square, mostly made of horns, with a sign indicating the direction.
4, honorific, used to address each other's family, shops, etc. : treasure.
5. Last name.
Second, the interpretation of words.
Classical Chinese version of Shuo Wen Jie Zi: Bao,. From Mi, from Wang, from Bei, from Sheng. Take care of the ancient prose and save the shell. ?
The vernacular version of Shuo Wen Jie Zi: Treasure, a treasure handed down from family. The glyph has "Mi, Wang and Bei" as the edge and "Yi" as the sound edge. This is the "treasure" in ancient China characters, and the "shell" is omitted.
Third, the evolution of glyphs (as shown in the figure)
Extended data
First, the magic weapon? 【fǎ bǎo】?
1, a Buddhist term, refers to Buddhist methods, and also refers to the mantle used by monks and Zhang Xi.
2. The mythical treasure that can subdue or kill the devil.
Metaphor is a particularly effective tool, method or experience: the mass line is the magic weapon of our work.
Second, the pagoda [b m: o t m:]?
The laudatory name of this tower. In the past, Buddhists decorated the tower with seven kinds of treasures such as gold, silver and glass, hence the name. This refers to the general tower.
Third, the treasure house [b?o?]?
Metaphor is a place with many precious things (often used in abstraction): a theoretical treasure house. Cultural treasure house.
Fourth, the treasure [Gu and B m: o]?
Particularly precious things: Dunhuang frescoes are the treasures of ancient art in China.
5. Treasure? [báo záng]?
1, which refers to underground minerals: developing underground treasures? .
2. Wealth to be further developed and utilized: the treasure of folk art? Endless. Zang (zang)