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.

This 'pants' character started as battlefield gear

qún

This 'skirt' character hides a 'lord' (君) inside

bèi

This cozy quilt character secretly moonlights as M

shān

Though it looks like 'mountain' + 'clothing', 衫 i

jiē

Its left side 行 means 'to walk' — but this chara

lán

This 'blue' character hides a botanical lab report

jiāo

Though it looks like 'scorched grass,' 蕉 is actua

wàn

Born as a scorpion pictograph in oracle bones, 万

cǎo

This 3,000-year-old grass pictograph still grows e

huā

This 'flower' character secretly means 'to spend'

chuán

This ‘boat’ character hides a 3,000-year-old can

bān

This 'sort' character began as a prince's name and

shū

Its 'tongue' radical isn’t about speaking—it’s

jiù

Though it looks like 'sun + flag,' 旧’s left side

liǎn

Though now meaning ‘face’, this character didn’

tuǐ

Its ancient form didn’t draw a leg — it drew a f

jiǎo

This 'foot' character hides a paradox: its right s

pán

This character looks like 'flesh + rebellion' — b

Originally a kneeling person cradling a baby — no

shēng

This 'sound' character began as a Bronze Age drum

cōng

This character literally fuses 'EAR' and 'GENERAL'

wén

Originally a door with an ear pressed to it — thi

liáo

This 'chat' character has an ear on top and a flam

ěr

This self-radical character began as a photorealis

zhě

Originally a pictograph of an elder walking, 者 ev

Though it looks like ‘silk + responsibility,’ 绩

zǒng

Born as 'bound hair + heart', this 9-stroke charac

liàn

This 'practice' character began as silk-refining