Guest guest Posted February 19, 2009 Report Share Posted February 19, 2009 Hi All, See the Characters for " Jianchuang " at http://tinyurl.com/arzeat : Assuming that " Chuang " means skin sore / ulcer, what does the term " Jian " mean in the phrases below. Hufu Jianchuang Protect Skin + ??Sword skin sores / ulcers Jianchuang ??Jian skin sores / ulcers Jianchuang Shengji ??Jian skin sores / ulcers + Engender Flesh Jiedu Jianchuang Resolve Toxin + ??Jian skin sores / ulcers Qufu Jianchuang Dispel Necrosis + ??Jian skin sores / ulcers Shengji Jianchuang Engender Flesh + ??Jian skin sores / ulcers Shoushi Jianchuang Astringe Damp + ??Jian skin sores / ulcers Zaoshi Jianchuang Dry / Wet ??Jian skin sores / ulcers Best regards, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 19, 2009 Report Share Posted February 19, 2009 Very interesting question. There are two words look very similar to each other: " 敛 " (Lian) and " 剑 " (Jian)。Lian means converge, shrink, or reduce. To me, it makes more sense when it is used with the word " chuang " (ulcer) then " Jian " . So this could be a pronouncation of a typo? The phrase " 剑疮 " (Jian-Chuang) is very seldom used, on the other hand, " 敛疮 " (Lian-Chuang) is very commonly seen in TCM discussion. On Wed, Feb 18, 2009 at 6:06 PM, < wrote: > Hi All, > > See the Characters for " Jianchuang " at http://tinyurl.com/arzeat : > > Assuming that " Chuang " means skin sore / ulcer, what does the term > " Jian " mean in the phrases below. > > Hufu Jianchuang Protect Skin + ??Sword skin sores / ulcers > > Jianchuang ??Jian skin sores / ulcers > > Jianchuang Shengji ??Jian skin sores / ulcers + Engender Flesh > > Jiedu Jianchuang Resolve Toxin + ??Jian skin sores / ulcers > > Qufu Jianchuang Dispel Necrosis + ??Jian skin sores / ulcers > > Shengji Jianchuang Engender Flesh + ??Jian skin sores / ulcers > > Shoushi Jianchuang Astringe Damp + ??Jian skin sores / ulcers > > Zaoshi Jianchuang Dry / Wet ??Jian skin sores / ulcers > > Best regards, > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 20, 2009 Report Share Posted February 20, 2009 Jian is a sword. There's lot's of kung-fu styles that reference jian. Here " jian " appears to used as a verb, as in to jian chuang. To cut out or resolve. It just looks like the verb used with chuang for healing purposes, just as zao (dry) is the verb used to address shi (dampness). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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