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 as a sieve pictograph, 希 evolved from 'rare

This serene 3-stroke character began as a coiled s

zuǒ

This ‘left’ character began as a detailed drawin

shì

This ‘room’ character hides a 3,000-year-old roo

Originally a ritual scene under a roof — now the

wán

Its roof radical doesn’t mean 'house' here — it

hái

Though it looks like a child wearing a pig-mask (

xìng

This 'surname' character hides an ancient truth: i

shǐ

Though it means 'to begin', 始 hasn’t begun a sin

Originally a bride’s hair-binding ceremony in ora

mèi

Its ancient form literally pictures a woman + 'not

nǎi

This 5-stroke character — the shortest word for '

Originally a man crowned with a ritual hairpin, 夫

cháng

This six-stroke character began as a sunlit patch

bào

Originally a bronze-age image of a hand delivering

wèn

This 'ask' character isn’t built from 'words' or

chàng

This 'sing' character hides a double sun (昌) — a

This ‘elder brother’ character began as two mout

yuán

Though it looks like a simple mouth (口), 员 secre

This character was invented in the 1800s solely to

gào

Originally a pictograph of a cow's head on a ritua

ba

Born from a coiling snake glyph, this 7-stroke mou

Ancient oracle bones show 司 as a hand directing a

yòu

This 'right' character began as a detailed drawing

qiān

Originally a banner pole commanding armies, 千 evo

This 5-stroke character began as a Bronze Age farm

zhù

This 'help' character literally shows added streng

bié

Originally a ritual knife marking something 'set a