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.

de

This character started as a warrior grabbing treas

suǒ

This 'so' character isn't a word at all — it's an

guò

This 'passing' character began as a Bronze Age ske

This 3-stroke character began as a sacred symbol o

dòng

Originally a bronze-age glyph showing the grueling

Originally a ritual staff in a mouth — now the mo

jiù

Originally a pictograph of 'approaching a vessel',

dào

Originally an arrow striking its target — now the

yāo

This character began as a pictograph of hands grip

This 'use' character began as a kneeling person of

wéi

Originally a hand guiding an elephant — now a 4-s

Born as a pictograph of a tiny thread, 么 shed its

fàn

This 'cooked rice' character is so culturally cent

fēi

This 3-stroke character began as an ancient pictog

This character is a 3,200-year-old rainstorm froze

yuàn

Though it means 'courtyard,' 院 evolved from 'wall

zhōng

This 'cup' character is actually a bell in disguis

qián

This 'coin' character began as a Bronze Age spade

This 'medical' character began as a pictograph of

chē

This 'car' character is actually a 3,000-year-old

mǎi

This 'buy' character hides ancient currency: its t

māo

This 'cat' isn’t ancient—it entered Chinese writ

dòu

This character looks like 'speech + bean' — and t

shí

Born as a Bronze Age scribe's mark on bamboo, 识 e

xiè

Originally 'an arrow of words' — this character f

qǐng

This 'please' isn't passive politeness — it's an

shéi

Though it looks like 'speech + bird,' 谁 has zero

This 'dialect' character hides a shout — its righ