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.

Born from archers’ leather belts tightening as th

gǒng

This 6-stroke character hides a Warring States-era

Originally a bronze-age symbol of lightning-strike

lòu

This 21-stroke raincloud character hides a linguis

xiá

This 17-stroke character began as a bronze-age ske

shuāng

This ‘frost’ character hides a secret: its botto

huò

This 'suddenly' character hides a thunderstorm in

báo

Its lower half ‘包’ doesn’t mean ‘wrap’ here

diāo

Though it looks like 'bird + circle', 雕 means 'to

Born from a bird pictograph and a phonetic 'here'

This 'hire' character hides a bird radical — beca

Born from a bird + drumstick pictograph, 雅 evolve

qiāo

This 'sparrow' character secretly moonlights as 'f

This character began as a shorthand for ‘convict-

yǐn

This 'hidden' character began as a hillside refuge

suì

Its radical 阝 means 'mound'—so 隧 literally mean

zhàng

Born from a hill + a patterned curtain, 障 evolved

This 'crack' character hides a strategic worldview

ài

Originally a Bronze Age image of water blocked by

lóng

A thunderous classical character meaning 'prospero

xiàn

Its ancient form shows a person plunging headfirst

táo

This 'pottery' character doesn’t just hold clay

líng

Though it looks like a simple 'mound,' 陵 is a sil

chén

Originally the name of a Zhou dynasty state, 陈 ev

dǒu

Its ancient form showed a person scaling a cliff w

lòu

Looks like a hunched figure in a hillside shack —

jǐng

This 6-stroke character began as a Bronze Age boar

chǎn

This character’s gate (门) doesn’t lead to a roo