PUNYCODEX

The Authentic Orthography

陰陽 Yīnyáng

Cosmic Duality · Interdependence of opposites

Tier 2 Yīnyáng.com · Yīn-yáng.com
Yīnyáng — Cosmic Duality
01

The Authentic Name

Unicode restoration and ASCII comparison

Original Script

陰陽

The name in its original Taoist form. Yīnyáng (陰陽) is attested in the source tradition — “Interdependence of opposites”. Its macron-length vowels and acute stress marks carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.

ASCII Constraint

yinyang

Reduced to plain yinyang, the name loses everything that made it specific: macron-length vowels and acute stress marks. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.

Unicode Restoration

Yīnyáng

The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Yīnyáng restores macron-length vowels and acute stress marks, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.

Punycode Encoding
Yīnyáng.com → xn--ynyng-zqa92c.com

The non-ASCII characters in Yīnyáng are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is Yīnyáng.

02

Original Script & Provenance

How Yīnyáng travels from ancient script to the modern URL

陰陽
Chinese characters
Yīnyáng
Reading: /ín.jǎŋ/
Reconstruction: /ín.jǎŋ/
Hanzi (Sino-Tibetan) · left-to-right; traditional top-to-bottom · Oracle-bone – present, c. 1200 BCE – · China
Chinese character 陰
Logogram
Chinese logogram representing a morpheme; pinyin gives the modern Mandarin reading.
Chinese character 陽
Logogram
Chinese logogram representing a morpheme; pinyin gives the modern Mandarin reading.
Original Script
陰陽
Indigenous writing
Transliteration
Yīnyáng
Scholarly reading
Unicode Restoration
Yīnyáng
Registrable form
Punycode
xn--Ynyng-zqa92c.com
DNS encoding
ASCII Fallback
yinyang
Flattened spelling

Etymology

Chinese 陰陽 Yīnyáng; from 陰 yīn “shady, dark" + 陽 yáng “bright, sunny"; the interdependence of complementary cosmic forces.

Meaning

Cosmic Duality

From original to transliteration

  1. The name is written with the Chinese characters 陰陽.
  2. Each character is a logogram that encodes meaning and historical pronunciation.
  3. Hanyu Pinyin with tone marks preserves Mandarin pronunciation; the ASCII form loses tone.
  4. The Unicode restoration Yīnyáng is the registrable form because hanzi are outside the .com IDN table.
  • 陰陽 Original script
  • Yīnyáng Unicode restoration
  • yinyang ASCII fallback
  • Yīn-yáng owned
  • Unihan Database
    modern East Asia U+9670
  • Daodejing
    c. 4th–3rd c. BCE China Daodejing, selected chapters
  • Zhuangzi
    c. 3rd c. BCE China Zhuangzi, selected chapters
Chinese classicsTier 2
I ChingTier 2
Karlgren, Grammata Serica RecensaTier 1
Pulleyblank, Lexicon of Reconstructed PronunciationTier 2
Schuessler, ABC Etymological Dictionary of Old ChineseTier 1

DNS / IDN note

The Unicode restoration Yīnyáng preserves the Mandarin tone mark; the ASCII form loses tone.

  • !Old Chinese reconstructions (Baxter-Sagart) are hypothetical and continue to be refined.
  • !Simplified and traditional forms may differ in glyph shape.
  • !The Old Chinese pronunciation of these characters is reconstructed and differs from modern Mandarin.
  • !Tonal categories of Middle Chinese are better known than the precise phonetic values of Old Chinese tones.
03

Pronunciation

How Yīnyáng was spoken

/in˥ jaŋ˧˥/ Modern Standard Mandarin (Pinyin)
yīn Syllable with high front glide [j] (written 'y' in Pinyin), high front vowel [i], alveolar nasal [n], and Tone 1 (high level, ˥).
yáng Syllable with glide [j], open vowel [a], velar nasal [ŋ], and Tone 2 (rising, ˧˥). The final '-ng' is a single velar nasal, not a cluster.
04

The Two Modes

Complementary Cosmic Duality

Yīnyáng is not a battle between good and evil. It is the Chinese understanding that every phenomenon is shaped by the pull of two complementary tendencies: dark and bright, still and active, receptive and assertive, earth and heaven. The earliest meanings of the words were topographical — yīn the shady north side of a hill, yáng the sunny south side — and from that concrete root grew a cosmology that underlies medicine, statecraft, martial arts, and divination.

What makes yin and yang powerful is not their opposition but their interdependence. Each contains a seed of the other, and each turns into the other at its extreme.

Darkness and Light

Yin is not merely dark; it is the capacity to receive, to hold, to rest. Yang is not merely bright; it is the capacity to act, to extend, to warm.

Cyclic Transformation

At its height, yang becomes yin; at its depth, yin becomes yang. This is the engine of seasons, days, and human fortunes.

Cosmic Balance

Health, harmony, and good government all depend on keeping yin and yang in dynamic equilibrium rather than crushing one side.

Medical Diagnosis

Traditional Chinese medicine reads illness as yin-yang imbalance: too much heat, too little moisture, excess above, deficiency below.

Sacred Symbols

The taijitu The black-and-white emblem of interpenetrating yin and yang, each with a dot of the other
Broken and solid lines Yin (broken) and yang (solid) as the grammar of the Yijing
Sun and moon The brightest yang and the darkest yin luminaries
Tiger and dragon Two paired energies, often yin and yang, in martial and alchemical symbolism
Water and fire The canonical yin and yang elements in the body and cosmos
05

Mythology

Stories of Yīnyáng

Yīnyáng has no origin myth in the usual sense. It is a lens through which Chinese thinkers read the origin of everything. Its stories are therefore cosmological and medical rather than biographical.

Yijing

One Yin, One Yang

The Xici appendices of the Yijing state: 'One yin and one yang, this is called the Dao.' The cosmos is not governed by a personal deity but by the alternation of these two modes. Divination is the art of reading where one stands in that alternation.

Daodejing

All Things Carry Yin and Embrace Yang

Daodejing 42 says that the ten thousand things 'carry yin on their backs and embrace yang in their arms,' achieving harmony through the blending of chongqi — the empty or vital breath. Yin and yang are not external forces but the internal structure of every existing thing.

Zuo Zhuan

Yin-Yang as Natural Philosophy

By the fourth century BCE, court physicians and astronomers were explaining disease and celestial anomalies in terms of yin-yang imbalance. The Zuo Zhuan records a physician diagnosing a ruler's illness by identifying which of the six natural qi — including yin, yang, wind, rain, darkness, and light — had become excessive.

Dong Zhongshu

The Han Synthesis

In the second century BCE, Dong Zhongshu integrated yin-yang cosmology with imperial Confucianism. He argued that natural disasters were heaven's response to human misconduct — a theory that made yin-yang balance into a political as well as a metaphysical concern.

Go Deeper

Extended Lore

Yīnyáng is an invitation to stop choosing sides. It says that what looks like opposition is really relationship: day has no meaning without night, speaking has no meaning without silence, strength has no meaning without vulnerability. The small dot in each half of the taijitu is the most radical part of the symbol: nothing is pure; everything carries the seed of its seeming opposite.

Enter Extended Lore
Yīnyáng mascot