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.

sǎn

This ‘umbrella’ hides a 2,000-year-old visual pu

jiàn

This 'healthy' character hides a drummer’s hand a

jiǎ

This 'fake' character began as a priest stepping i

jiè

This 'borrow' character hides a time-traveling mea

xìn

This 'letter' character literally means 'person sp

wèi

Originally a pictograph of a person standing on hi

gān

This sleek 3-stroke character began as a spear —

This 5-stroke particle looks like a sigh — and fu

jiǔ

This three-stroke character began as a kneeling pe

shì

Born as three horizontal lines for grandfather-fat

qiě

Born as a sacred ancestral altar carved in bone, t

xīn

This four-stroke 'heart' isn't just anatomy — it'

shù

Originally a hand tallying sticks while stepping

zhòng

Originally a person standing on a mound to show de

xiāng

This 'each other' character hides an ancient looko

píng

Originally a bronze-age diagram of level ground,

This 'his' isn’t about ownership — it’s a liter

yīng

This 'should' character began as a kneeling person

This 7-stroke character started as a hand gripping

Born as a loom frame in ancient bronzes, 业 evolve

dāng

Originally a bronze-age image of a blade intercept

jiā

This 'add' character hides a bronze-age image of f

shí

Originally a pictograph of grain stored safely und

Born as a picture of jade’s inner grain, 理 evolv

Originally a detailed drawing of a nose — the anc

huà

Born as two mirrored people—one flipped upside-do

Originally a kneeling woman agreeing with a mouth

This two-stroke character began as a bent-arm pict