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癸酉 — Jiazi #10 (Yin Water Rooster)Illustration of 癸酉 (Yin Water Rooster) — position 10 of 60 in the Chinese sexagenary cycle. Stem and branch shown side by side.60 JIAZI · 六十甲子Yin Water Rooster#10 OF 60
Sexagenary Cycle · 60 Jiazi

Yin Water Rooster (癸酉) 癸酉

癸酉 is the 10th combination in the 60 Jiazi (六十甲子) sexagenary cycle, pairing the Heavenly Stem 癸 (Yin Water) with the Earthly Branch 酉 (the Rooster). Each Jiazi carries a fixed elemental character and reads differently depending on where it sits in a BaZi chart and what Day Master it is being interpreted against.

癸酉 (Yin Water Rooster) summary: position 10 of 60 in the sexagenary cycle. Heavenly Stem 癸 = Yin Water. Earthly Branch 酉 = Rooster, primary element Metal. Hidden stems: 辛 (Yin Metal). Stem-on-branch relationship from the stem’s perspective: resource (branch produces stem).


About 癸酉 (Yin Water Rooster)

In the 60 Jiazi sexagenary cycle, 癸酉 (Yin Water Rooster) sits at position 10 of 60. It pairs the Heavenly Stem 癸 — the Yin expression of Water, covered in depth in the Yin Water Day Master entry — with the Earthly Branch 酉 (the Rooster), whose primary element is Metal and which secondarily holds the hidden stems 辛 (Yin Metal).

The classical character of any Jiazi comes from two structural questions: what relationship the branch element has to the stem element above it, and whether the stem has a “root” in any of the branch’s hidden stems. Both are deterministic and apply consistently wherever this Jiazi appears in a chart — Year, Month, Day, or Hour pillar — though the practical implication shifts with position.

How 癸 sits on 酉

The branch’s element produces the stem. 酉 feeds 癸 — in BaZi terms, the branch acts as resource (印). 癸酉 is nourished and supported from below; the stem has natural backing without having to earn it. This is read as an “auspicious” structural pairing only when the chart actually needs more of Water; an over-resourced chart reads differently.

癸 is unrooted in this Jiazi: none of the hidden stems in 酉 share Water, so the visible stem floats on a foreign element. The stem’s strength comes from elsewhere in the chart (other pillars carrying Water); without that support, the stem is read as “weak” or unstable.

Hidden stems within 酉

酉 carries 辛 (Yin Metal) as hidden stems. In BaZi these are latent influences: they only surface when the rest of the chart triggers them — through combinations involving 酉, through clashes that crack open the branch, or through transformations during specific Luck Pillars.

From 癸’s perspective, the hidden stems represent the following Ten God relationships: as 偏印 Indirect Resource. These determine what kinds of opportunity, pressure, or support emerge from 酉 when it is activated.

Nayin classification: 剑锋金 (Sword-Edge Gold)

In the classical Nayin (納音) system, every pair of consecutive Jiazis maps to one of 30 named “sounding elements” — an alternative elemental classification used alongside the standard Five Phases. 癸酉 is classified as 剑锋金 (Jiàn fēng jīn, “Sword-Edge Gold”), with an underlying element of Metal.

Nayin is read as a poetic, descriptive layer rather than a structural one: the imagery of the name (“Sword-Edge Gold”) implies how the Jiazi’s elemental quality manifests in practice. 癸酉 shares its Nayin with one other Jiazi: 壬申 (Yang Water Monkey). Together, this pair forms the 剑锋金 Nayin set.

Combinations & clashes for 酉

Every Earthly Branch has exactly one combination partner (六合) and one clash partner (六沖). When a chart contains both members of a pair, the relationship transforms or destabilises that pillar. 酉’s pairings:

Combination (六合)

酉 combines with (Dragon). When both branches appear together, they transform into Metal. Other Jiazis carrying 辰: 戊辰 (Yang Earth Dragon), 庚辰 (Yang Metal Dragon), 壬辰 (Yang Water Dragon), 甲辰 (Yang Wood Dragon), 丙辰 (Yang Fire Dragon).

Clash (六沖)

酉 clashes with (Rabbit). When both branches appear in a chart, they oppose each other elementally and the related pillar destabilises. Other Jiazis carrying 卯: 丁卯 (Yin Fire Rabbit), 己卯 (Yin Earth Rabbit), 辛卯 (Yin Metal Rabbit), 癸卯 (Yin Water Rabbit), 乙卯 (Yin Wood Rabbit).

3-Harmony group: 巳+酉+丑 → Metal

In BaZi, the twelve Earthly Branches form four 3-Harmony groups (三合): trios that, when all three branches appear together in a chart, combine to produce a single elemental phase. 酉 belongs to the 巳+酉+丑 group, which combines into Metal. The other two branches in this group are 巳 and 丑.

When 酉 appears with both partner branches, the resulting elemental transformation can dominate the chart’s reading. Even a partial harmony (two of the three branches) creates a noticeable pull toward Metal. Other Jiazis carrying the partner branches: 乙丑, 己巳, 丁丑, 辛巳, 己丑, 癸巳, 辛丑, 乙巳, 癸丑, 丁巳.

Direction set: Autumn (申+酉+戌)

The four direction sets (三會) group the twelve Earthly Branches by season and cardinal direction: 酉 belongs to 申+酉+戌 — the Autumn group, associated with West and the Metal element.

Direction sets carry a “seasonal weight” that complements the 3-Harmony grouping. Where 3-Harmony combines distant branches into one element, direction sets combine three sequential branches representing the early/middle/late phase of one season. Other Jiazis sharing this direction set: 壬申, 甲戌, 甲申, 丙戌, 丙申, 戊戌, 戊申, 庚戌, 庚申, 壬戌.

How 癸酉’s Year Stem reads against each Day Master

When 癸酉 sits at the Year Pillar, its stem (癸) takes on a different Ten God meaning depending on the chart owner’s Day Master. Each row below is computed deterministically from the elemental and polarity relationship.

Day MasterTen God Relationship
Yang Wood 正印 Direct Resource Read →
Yin Wood 偏印 Indirect Resource Read →
Yang Fire 正官 Direct Officer Read →
Yin Fire 七殺 Seven Killings Read →
Yang Earth 正財 Direct Wealth Read →
Yin Earth 偏財 Indirect Wealth Read →
Yang Metal 傷官 Hurting Officer Read →
Yin Metal 食神 Eating God Read →
Yang Water 劫財 Rob Wealth Read →
Yin Water 比肩 Companion Read →

Years in 1900–2030 carrying 癸酉

The 60 Jiazi cycle repeats every 60 years, so 癸酉 appears at fixed intervals. Within the 1900–2030 reference range, the years carrying 癸酉 are below. Each links to a full reference page for that calendar year.

Frequently asked questions

What is the 癸酉 (Yin Water Rooster) Jiazi?

癸酉 is the 10th of 60 stem-branch combinations in the Chinese sexagenary cycle. It pairs the Heavenly Stem 癸 with the Earthly Branch 酉 (Rooster). The cycle repeats every 60 years, so years carrying 癸酉 appear at fixed intervals.

What years are 癸酉 years?

Within 1900–2030, the years carrying 癸酉 are: 1933, 1993. Each is exactly 60 years apart. For example, someone born in 1933 and someone born in 1993 share the same Year Pillar (癸酉) but lead different lives shaped by their individual Day Pillars and Luck Pillars.

Is 癸酉 a good Jiazi?

BaZi doesn’t classify Jiazis as universally good or bad. 癸酉 carries a specific elemental and structural character (resource (branch produces stem)) that reads as helpful for some Day Masters and challenging for others. Whether it’s welcome in a particular chart depends on that chart’s overall composition and what elements the Day Master needs.

What is the difference between Jiazi and Day Master?

Day Master refers specifically to the Heavenly Stem in the Day Pillar — one of four stems in a chart. Jiazi refers to the entire stem-branch pair in any pillar (Year, Month, Day, or Hour). When 癸酉 appears at the Day Pillar, the 癸 stem becomes that person’s Day Master; in any other pillar, 癸酉 is read as a contextual influence around the Day Master.

Further reading from the blog

Selected posts from Master Sean Chan’s blog that cover this topic or closely related ones in practice:

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