I. Basic explanation
Qiang, a secondary word in Chinese, is pronounced Qiang (zēng or zēng), and its original meaning refers to the general term for silk fabrics in ancient times. When reading zēng, the initial is z, the vowel is eng and the tone is one; When reading zèng, the initial is z, the final is eng, and the tone is four tones. Stroke order: Flip, Flip, Lift, Point, Flip, Vertical, Horizontal, Vertical, Point, Flip, Horizontal, Vertical, Horizontal, Horizontal, Horizontal. Number of strokes: 15. Radical: Li.
Second, related words
1, reeling [zēng bó]: the general term for silk.
2. Gold enamel [jρNZēng]: gold and silk. Generally refers to gold and silver property.
3. [Tí z ē ng]: thick silk.
4. Bowboat [zēng chuán]: Small warships of the Navy in the Qing Dynasty, including bow boats, bow boats and bow boats.
5. Flour [zēng xù]: silk floss. Also refers to clothes made of silk and cotton.
3. What kinds of silks are there?
1. All-silk fabric refers to the fabric whose warp and weft are made of household silk, such as silk georgette, silk crepe and silk taffeta.
2. Rayon fabrics refer to fabrics whose warp and weft are made of recycled fibers, such as matt spinning, rayon electrospinning and rayon antique satin.
3. Synthetic silk fabrics refer to fabrics whose warp and weft are made of synthetic filaments or their processed filaments, such as nylon spun silk and polyester crepe silk.
4. Tussah silk fabric refers to fabrics whose warp and weft are all made of tussah silk, such as Qianshan silk, Yajiang silk and tussah spun silk.
5. Interwoven fabrics refer to fabrics in which warp and weft are interwoven with different raw materials, such as fragrant crepe interwoven with real silk and viscose yarn, feather yarn and quilt cover interwoven with viscose yarn and cotton yarn, polyester yarn and polyester cotton yarn, etc.
6. Satin fabric refers to the fabric in which the warp and weft are interwoven separately, but the distance is far, but it is evenly distributed, such as soft satin, brocade, antique satin, etc. Compared with plain fabric and twill fabric, satin fabric has long floating line, soft hand feeling and bright luster, but it is easy to rub and fluff in dyeing and finishing because of less interweaving points and poor strength.