Browse Characters — Learn Chinese Through Stories

Every character has an origin. Discover the pictographs, myths, and history behind each Chinese character — with pinyin, stroke order, HSK level, and audio pronunciation.

yìng

Originally a pictograph of sunlight radiating outw

kūn

This 'descendant' character began as two suns — a

xún

This 'ten-day period' character began as a sun wit

dàn

This 'dawn' character began as a sun kissing the h

shī

Born as a bronze-age banner command, this 9-stroke

xié

This 'inclined' character began as a tilted ladle

dǒu

This 4-stroke character began as a bronze-age grai

This 'enemy' character hides a tongue — because i

jìng

This character began as a bronze-age priest holdin

Born from a hand arranging bamboo slips, 叙 isn’t

jiù

Its left side looks like 'begging' (求), but add t

mǐn

Its ancient form showed a crouching person under a

shè

This 'absorption' character began as a hand seizin

lán

This 'blocking' character hides a pastoral origin:

bǎi

Its right side looks like 'bai' (hundred), but thi

kuò

Born as a hand pulling a taut bowstring, this 6-st

Its right side 齐 once showed three grain stalks

cāo

This 'grasp' character evolved from ancient battle

dǎng

This 'hand-meeting-force' character evolved from a

Born as a bronze-age pictograph of a club striking

yōng

Though it means 'to embrace,' 拥 evolved from anci

jiǎn

Though it looks like 'inspect' + 'hand', 捡 isn't

zhuàng

Its right side 壮 means 'strong' — so 撞 literall

Its right side 其 looks like scissors cutting — b

Born from 'gropping in dusk,' this 13-stroke chara

Born from hands stroking sheep’s wool, this chara

zhāi

This 'pluck' character hides a poetic paradox: its

shuāi

This 14-stroke character hides a battlefield secre