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.

guō

This character doesn’t exist in ancient scripts

huì

This 'shrill sound' character hides a 3,000-year-o

xiāo

This rare character isn’t just ‘boastful’ — it

This 3,000-year-old 'blessing' character appears i

A mouth (口) shouting into a dagger-axe (戈): this

lóu

Born from Ming dynasty bandit novels, 喽 (lóu) is

piào

This 'fast' character isn’t about speed—it’s th

ái

A 'mouth + love' character that ironically means '

Born in Cantonese opera scripts, not ancient bronz

jiào

This character looks like a mouth shouting — but

This whisper-character hides in plain sight: its '

Born in late imperial fiction, 嘀 isn’t ancient

tǎn

This rare character captures the ancient Chinese i

sǒu

This character began as a bronze-age command to mo

zhè

A phonetic loan from Manchu ‘je’ — not native C

lián

It’s not a character — it’s a digital ghost: no

áo

This mouth-shaped scream (口) married to a dancing

tōng

Born in Ming-Qing street theater, 嗵 isn’t just

diǎ

Born in 1920s Shanghai slang, this 'coy' character

Born in Ming dynasty novels, this 13-stroke gasp i

háo

This 13-stroke 'howl' character hides a marshland

chī

This character looks like a mouth rejecting nonsen

A 'mouth' flanked by two 'completed cycles' — thi

wēng

Born from Buddhist chants to render Sanskrit 'Om',

jiē

This 12-stroke 'sigh' isn't drawn from life — it'

This 'sizzle' character wasn't carved on ancient b

This character was invented purely to capture the

shì

Born from mouth + ears, 嗜 captures addiction as t

qiàn

This 'pouch' character hides in plain sight — its

This ‘wū’ isn’t a crow’s call — it’s the qu

pǎng

Born in Qing-era street comedy, 嗙 isn’t ancient

sōu

Born from pure sound necessity — not ancient scri

This character isn’t used in speech or writing to

chēn

This 'anger' character hides a Buddhist bomb: its

Born in early 20th-century Shanghai, this 'machine

Born from snack-time chatter, not ancient scriptur

hài

Born in Ming fiction as a phonetic mashup — mouth

suō

Born from folk speech — not ancient scripture —

ài

This character looks like a mouth (口) strangled b

gòng

A mouth-shaped ghost character: born in 1900s Shan