surname Wei

= + : Willy Walrus (w) used a hot water bottle (胃) to relief his stomach (胃) pain and it worked so well that he started selling those bottles himself. He even started an ad campaign and set up an advertising column (讠) in the Eiffel Tower's bathroom (ei4). There is a big picture of him saying (谓) how well the hot water bottle worked for him.
to speak / to say / to name / to designate / meaning / sense

= + : Willy Walrus (w) used a hot water bottle (胃) to relief his stomach (胃) pain and it worked so well that he started selling those bottles himself. He even started an ad campaign and set up an advertising column (讠) in the Eiffel Tower's bathroom (ei4). There is a big picture of him saying (谓) how well the hot water bottle worked for him.

谓 character breakdown

stomach / CL:個|个[ge4]

= + : Willy Walrus (w) set up a mooncake (月) field (田) in the Eiffel Tower's bathroom (ei4). This led to him eating way too much cake, and now his stomach (胃) hurts. To relief the pain he uses a hot water bottle (mnemonic symbol for 胃).
"speech" or "words" radical in Chinese characters (Kangxi radical 149) / see also 言字旁[yan2 zi4 pang2]

Mnemonic symbol: this character looks like a big "i" (like in information), and I'll represent it by an advertising column. Maud Younger (y) gives a speech (讠) standing on top of an advertising column (讠) in the anthill's kitchen (an2).

Characters with 谓 as component

谓 is not used as a component in another character.

Words with 谓

so-called / what is called
to be indifferent / not to matter / cannot be said to be
pointless / meaningless / unnecessarily
it could even be said
title; appellation; form of address
title / appellation / form of address
(literary) what is? / what is the meaning of?
(grammatical) predicate
subject-predicate construction
subject-predicate sentence / subject-predicate clause
to mean / meaning
cannot be deemed / unexpectedly
nonsense / nonsensical / incomprehensible / to make no sense
see 一之為甚|一之为甚[yi1 zhi1 wei2 shen4]
predicate (in logic and grammar)
subject-verb-object SVO or subject-predicate-object sentence pattern (e.g. in Chinese grammar)
subject-object-verb SOV or subject-object-predicate sentence pattern (e.g. in Japanese or Korean grammar)
(idiom) don't say you haven't been forewarned (threat used by the PRC in international diplomacy)

Sentences with 谓

谓 currently does not appear in any sentence.