Chinese Characters Starting with "ALL"

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

This 'drawing out' character hides a boat in its r

jiān

This 'shear' character isn’t just old—it’s a li

yuàn

This 'clerk' character hides a rope-pulling hand:

kèn

This rare, literary character looks like 'hand + n

qián

This character began as a bamboo-pole pictograph o

tiàn

This 11-stroke character looks like a hand tiptoei

This 11-stroke character hides a secret: its '米'

zōu

This character looks like a hand grabbing 'take'

bīng

This character is a frozen snapshot of ancient Chi

chè

This 'pull' character isn’t about tugging doors

zhěng

This 'throw' character hides a dramatic secret: it

Born in Beijing street talk, not ancient bronzes

Its right side is 夜 (night) — not because it hap

qiān

This forgotten character hides a 2,300-year-old im

This 11-stroke 'drag' character hides a Bronze Age

hùn

This 'edging' character was invented by Warring St

póu

This 11-stroke character began as a Bronze Age pic

duō

This 11-stroke 'pick-up' character hides a 'barkin

lūn

This 7-stroke character looks like a hand launchin

diān

It looks like 'hand + divination'—a character bor

zuó

This character looks like 'hand + foot', but it me

ruó

This obscure 'rub' character vanished from daily u

niǎn

This 11-stroke character hides a 3,000-year-old te

This character’s defining stroke — the long, tap

chuí

This character’s 11 strokes choreograph a real th

dáo

This ‘reeling-in’ character hides in plain sight

bǎi

This character looks like a hand (扌) splitting ‘

mén

Though only six strokes, 扪 hides a 3,000-year-old

liè

Its 11 strokes visually mimic a hand violently twi

wàn

This character looks like a hand (扌) coiling a ro

This 'character' isn't ancient or poetic — it's a

zùn

This 'push' character vanished from speech 1,000 y

This character has zero strokes, zero historical a

This 'eight' isn't for counting — it's a 2,000-ye

lu:3

Its right side 吕 — two mouths stacked — isn’t

tǒng

Born from a 'tube' and a 'hand,' this 10-stroke ch

jùn

This 'gather' character began as a pictograph of a

Its right side looks like the number five (五), bu

xié

This character began as a Bronze Age image of grip

ruá

This 'crumple' character hides a 2,300-year-old te