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yíshì

Yíshì is a pinyin transcription that can correspond to several different Chinese terms, depending on the characters used. Because Mandarin words sharing the same pinyin can have distinct meanings, the exact sense of yíshì must be determined from the written form.

Two common interpretations are:

- 遗世 (yí shì): to withdraw from society or to live in seclusion. In literary and philosophical contexts,

- 遗事 (yí shì): remnants of past events or historical anecdotes left behind in records or narratives. This

A third potential collision is with the term 义士 (yìshì), which has a different pronunciation (the first

In modern Mandarin, the precise meaning of yíshì hinges on the written characters. Without character clarification,

it
often
appears
in
compounds
such
as
遗世独立,
which
describes
someone
or
something
as
detached
from
worldly
life
or
conventional
norms.
The
character
遗
carries
the
idea
of
something
left
behind,
while
世
refers
to
the
world.
usage
appears
in
historical
or
biographical
writing
to
refer
to
earlier
events,
tales,
or
details
cited
within
a
larger
work.
It
is
more
common
in
classical
or
scholarly
texts
than
in
everyday
speech.
syllable
is
fourth
tone,
not
second).
义士
means
a
righteous
person,
a
loyal
hero,
or
a
martyr,
and
is
typical
in
historical
or
literary
contexts.
They
are
distinct
in
both
meaning
and
tone
from
遗世
or
遗事.
the
term
remains
ambiguous.
Related
terms
include
遗世独立,
which
expresses
aloofness
from
worldly
concerns,
and
遗事,
which
points
to
past
events
or
anecdotes
preserved
in
text.