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 'France' character began as a mythic justice

xíng

Originally a Bronze Age crossroads pictograph — n

dìng

Originally a pictograph of a nail driven under a r

fāng

Originally a ritual square plot on oracle bones,

ér

Born as a pictograph of a wise man's beard, 而 evo

zhǒng

This ‘type/seed’ character grew from ancient gra

zhǔ

That tiny dot on top isn’t just a stroke — it’s

chéng

Originally a ritual halberd sealing a vow — now t

Once a sacred ritual banner symbolizing cosmic con

de

This ‘de’ looks like earth (土) holding a footst

yòng

Originally a bronze vessel seen from above — now

hēi

This character began as a soot-covered person knee

guǎn

This 'building' character hides food in its bones

yán

This ‘color’ character doesn’t depict rainbows

Its ancient form shows a hand pointing to the 'hea

fēi

Originally twin bird wings symbolizing separation,

líng

This 'zero' isn’t empty — it’s rain falling dro

xuě

This character’s top half is literally 'rain' —

This 7-stroke character began as a detailed oracle

suī

This ‘although’ character hides an ancient insec

yīn

Born as 'north-facing hillside' in bronze script,

mén

This 3-stroke 'gate' is one of Chinese’s oldest p

cháng

This 4-stroke character began as a pictograph of a

cuò

Born from ancient bronze inlay art, 错 originally

qiān

Though pencils contain graphite—not lead—Chinese

biān

This ‘side’ character contains a walking radical

yuǎn

This 'far' character hides a walking person (辶) f

dào

This character began as a pictograph of a man's he