<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><!DOCTYPE Zthes SYSTEM "http://zthes.z3950.org/xml/zthes-05.dtd">  <Zthes><term><termId>31478773</termId><termName>cuánjiān</termName><termType>PT</termType><termNote><![CDATA[ Literally meaning “massed [into a] point” (Kroll 2015, 68; 194) cuanjian is a form of traditional Chinese roof that meets at the top to form a spire. The term cuanjian first appeared in the literature of the Qing dynasty, and is characterized by a steep roof which can have several vertical ridges (in a polygonal plan) or no ridges (in a circular plan) but which comes together at the top in a point and is then covered with a tapered, jewel-shaped finial (baoding 寶頂). ]]></termNote><termCreatedDate>2026-03-30 21:08:55</termCreatedDate><relation><relationType>BT</relationType><termId>31472635</termId><termName>roofs by form: exterior shape</termName><termType>PT</termType></relation></term>  </Zthes>