Talk:𱁬

Reading

 * Hey, thanks a lot for the help with this entry. I noticed you changed the readings to kun. My source for them being on was this article http://nihonshock.com/2009/10/crazy-kanji-highest-stroke-count/. Could you find some other source saying otherwise? NMaia (talk) 18:47, 11 June 2017 (UTC)
 * It is phonologically impossible for them to be on (Chinese-derived) readings. In addition, the character was produced in Japan, so they are kun readings (even if taito is derived from tai and tou, the on readings of its constituent parts). The article you linked to looks like some sensationalist Buzzfeed-style stuff that isn't reliable. —suzukaze (t・c) 20:13, 11 June 2017 (UTC)

Unicode
This character is going to be encoded in the CJK Unified Ideographs Extension G at U+3106B. (This link may be lost in the future.) --Octahedron80 (talk) 02:25, 29 October 2019 (UTC)
 * It ended up being encoded at U+3106C. — justin(r)leung { (t...) 06:03, 12 March 2020 (UTC)

zomg CRAZIEST KANJI!!!!!
tch —Suzukaze-c◇◇ 22:27, 14 March 2020 (UTC)

𱁬 Chinese reading
This definitely a 国字 (Japanese made Kanji）there wouldn't (likely) be Chinese derived pronunciations as this character. However I can vouch that a number of people are borrowing this character into Chinese. This is quite natural because it is a novel & fun character. There are currently two readings which are used.

dui4 as referenced here in this dictionary https://www.hanyuguoxue.com/zidian/zi-200812 with the reading deriving from 䨺 part of the character.

Additionally tai4, (presumably a shortening of the Japanese reading taito) is being used by a number of netizens in the rather humorous combination 𱁬𪚥 (tai4 zhe2) One example is here. https://www.youtube.com/shorts/_ckmcgJyVZk The meaning of the word is "exceedingly wordy or complicated" (probably only of a Chinese character?)

I am a new user & am hesitant to add a new section here without community feedback

Best wishes HanziKanji (talk) 04:40, 5 February 2024 (UTC)

I went ahead & added the two Chinese readings, I will do so in the 中文 version as well. Again, I am a new user， so if anyone has formatting or other feedback please feel free to share. I posted a similar discussion on there. Thanks HanziKanji (talk) 19:23, 5 February 2024 (UTC)

RFV discussion: December 2023–January 2024
Chinese. — justin(r)leung { (t...) 19:41, 21 December 2023 (UTC)
 * RFV failed. — justin(r)leung { (t...) 06:29, 31 January 2024 (UTC)