Browse "HSK6" Characters

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

mēn

This 'stuffy' character began as a sealed gate tra

huàn

This character began as 'hands pressing down on th

This 'aha!' character hides a self-referential sec

yuè

This 'pleased' character hides a secret: its right

qià

This 'exactly' isn't mathematical — it's a heart

ēn

This character began as ‘divine mandate from abov

chǐ

Its 'ear' radical doesn’t mean you hear shame —

shù

This 'forgiveness' character literally means 'as i

huǎng

This character fuses 'heart' and 'light' — not to

héng

Originally a balanced scale beam over a heart, 恒

qiè

This ‘timid’ character isn’t just shy — its an

dài

This 'idle' character hides a Confucian courtroom:

This 'terror' character hides a textile: its right

Its top isn’t ‘younger brother’ — it’s a foss

zhōng

This character looks like 'center' stacked over 'h

This 7-stroke character began as a bound rope over

xún

Though it means 'to follow,' 循 hides a spiral she

Born as a charioteer’s hand gripping reins, 御 ev

This character hides *two feet* (止×2) under its

A single character that means both 'devoted discip

jìng

Its left side 彳 means 'footsteps', its right side

This '7-stroke conscription character' began as a

zhāng

Its three 彡 strokes aren’t decoration — they’r

Though it looks like a bow (弓), 弥 doesn’t shoot

xián

Though it means 'bow string,' 弦's real magic lies

This character began as 'falsifying cowrie-shell c

miào

Originally a Zhou dynasty ancestral hall glyph, 庙

kuò

This character began as a bronze-age blueprint for

láng

Born from aristocratic mansions, this character st

lián

Its 13 strokes encode ancient political philosophy

yōng

Looks like a roof sheltering 'use' — but its real

Originally a pictograph of a roof sheltering a per

chuáng

A banner-shaped character that measures buildings

zhì

This 'flag' isn't about waving cloth — it's the i

zhàng

This 7-stroke character began as a pictograph of f

Originally a pictograph of a sacred altar with rit

tiē

This 'snug-fit' character evolved from a cloth-pre

fān

This six-stroke character hides a maritime revolut

xiàng

Though it looks like it contains 'snake' (巳), 巷

cháo

This 'nest' character began as a literal tree-top