The
Cihai originated when
Lufei Kui, founder of the Zhonghua Book Company, decided to publish a comprehensive Chinese dictionary to compete with rival
Commercial Press's 1915
Ciyuan (辭源 "source of words"). Under the editorship of
Shu Xincheng (舒新城, 1893–1960), Shen Yi (沈颐) and others, over 100 lexicographers worked for two decades to compile the
Cihai, which was published in 1936. This 2-volume first edition has over 80,000 entries arranged under single characters in
radical-stroke order, with the words and compounds under each character listed by the number of characters and strokes. The definitions are written in
wenyan "literary Chinese". The
Taiwan branch of Zhonghua published a
Cihai reprint in 1956 with minor revisions additions and corrections. Plans for a second edition began after a 1958 conference about revising the
Cihai and
Ciyuan. The
Cihai Editorial Committee organized over 5000 scholars and specialists to undertake the new compilation, concentrating on revising the first edition entries and adding modern terminology, especially scientific and technical terminology.
Reinhard Hartmann describes the editorial work of revising
Cihai as taking "a tortuous course, 22 years from start to finish". After the original editor-in-chief Shu Xincheng died in 1960, he was succeeded by
Chen Wangdao, who died in 1977, and was succeeded by
Xia Zhengnong (夏征农, 1904–2008). From 1961 to 1962, sixteen
shiyong (試用 "trial") individual subject-matter fascicles were distributed for comments by specialists, and in 1965 a
weidinggao (未定稿 "draft manuscript")
Cihai was completed, but the
anti-intellectualism of the
Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) halted editorial work.
Shanghai Dictionary Publishing House (上海辭書出版社) published the three-volume revised edition
Cihai in 1979 and a condensed single-volume version in 1980. The revised 1979 edition has the same title and layout as the original 1936 edition, but serves a much different purpose. The first edition covers China's past and uses literary Chinese for definitions, while the second edition also covers modern China and international matters and uses
baihua "colloquial speech". It contains 106,578 entries, totaling more than 13.4 million characters. The single character headwords are arranged under 250
radicals, with subsequent words listed according to
stroke numbers. The third volume appends useful charts (e.g., a chronology of Chinese history), tables (weights and measures), lists (
Ethnic minorities in China), and a
pinyin index to single characters. The 1989 three-volume edition
Cihai was also compiled with Xia Zhengnong as editor-in-chief. It focused upon the addition of 20th-century terms, more proper names, and technical vocabulary. This third edition
Cihai contains 16,534 head characters, with more than 120,000 entries, totaling over 15.8 million characters. The 1999
Cihai contains 17,674 head characters, 122,835 entries, totaling more than 19.8 million characters. This fourth edition dictionary added many color tables and illustrations. Arrangement is by radicals and there are stroke-count, four-corner,
pinyin, and foreign-language indexes. It was also published in a compact version.
Cihai was consulted in the writing of
The First Series of Standardized Forms of Words with Non-standardized Variant Forms. The 2009 fifth edition
Cihai contains more than 127,200 entries, arranged by
pinyin, with over 22 million characters total.
Chen Zhili replaced Xia Zhengnong as chief editor, and lexicographers deleted about 7,000 entries for outdated terms and added almost 10,000 for neologisms. Volumes 1-4 contain text, with many color illustrations, and Volume 5 contains indexes. The
Dacihai (大辞海 "Great sea of words") is a 38-volume encyclopedia project that began in 2004, and published the first volumes in 2008. ==Publications==