Wu Zhenfeng’s Shang and Zhou Bronze Inscriptions and Image Integration III includes three bronze Gui, whose appearances and textures hints that it was made in the Spring and Autumn Period. This article mainly study the self-name “ ” of these Gui, which were made by Noble called Wuji. They are unearthed with a set of four, but only three of them are released. The Modifier is “ ”, in other words “𪔉”, which is commonly seen on inscriptions of bronze Ding and Li. Therefore, it is the first time to see “𪔉” describing Gui. “𪔉”, according to its configuration, refers to cooking grains in Ding, while Ding is normally supposed to cook meat and fish. However, Gui was usually used as cooking grains. This contradiction is worth thinking. Taking another modifier “ ” as an example, “ ”, which is considered to represent cooking grains, it could both be used in insriptions of Ding, Li and Gui, Xu. It indicates that “ ” was no longer an exclusive word for grain-cooking vessels during the long-term use, so it is the same with “𪔉”. The vessel name “ ” completes the puzzle of how the “攴” in “簋” changed. At the same time, along with the “𠥓” it contains, it can explain why “匭” could be the variant character of “簋”.