Hanzi, or Chinese characters, are easier to learn with the right study material and learning tips. Aside from learning them with GoEast’s Hanzi course, that is… Scroll down for the history, how to memorize and write Chinese characters, and finally, Chinese characters that look like their meaning.

How many Chinese characters are there?

Here’s a graph with some important numbers.

>50,000 Hanzi characters is the total amount of Chinese characters in existence.

But ~10,000 Chinese characters is the total amount of Hanzi a teacher at GoEast will know, or someone studying Chinese history, or linguistics or translators.

And ~6,000 Chinese characters is the amount most normally educated Chinese people can recognize.

The last two numbers are important for Mandarin learners: With ~3,000 Chinese characters you can read 95% of conventional Chinese written language. And with ~1,000 Chinese characters, you can read 80% of Chinese media.



History of Chinese characters

According to the legend, Chinese characters were invented around 5000 years ago by Cangjie, who has four (yes four!) eyes. When he did, the gods and ghost cried and it rained grain (谷雨Gǔyǔ literally means ‘grain rain’).

From there on, the history of characters can then be summarized into several periods.

14BC ~ 11BC: The oracle bones (甲骨文Jiǎgǔwén)

Our Chinese ancestors curved the character on tortoise shell or bones, which is why we can still read it thousands of years later. And because literally, they’re pictures, not standard characters, we can still recognise them! For instance, this character is a man standing. This is the predecessor of the Chinese character 人Rén (Person).

The oracle bones look like the Chinese characters we still use today: 日月水火土牛羊

~2BC: Chinese bronze inscriptions (金文Jīn wén)

The previous characters are all things we can see with our eyes, but how about the abstract meaning? These Chinese characters were added into bronze cups, bells and cauldrons. The characters evolved a bit.

~221 BC: Small seal script (小篆Xiǎo zhuàn)

But it’s really until the Qin emperor united China as one country and introduced small seal script characters for the whole country and agriculture. The big difference is that also abstract meanings were included in the Hanzi. They become characters rather than pictures. We can still very much recognize characters in this script, such as 家 on the left.

Evolution of Chinese characters

Here are three characters from the oracle bones (left), bronze inscriptions (middle) and small seal script (right). Here are the Chinese characters for 眉Méi: Eyebrow.

Chinese character style: Clerical script (隶书Lì shū)

From the Qin dynasty’s small seal script, this style of Chinese character writing came. It’s still very popular and both very readable and artistic thanks to being flat and fat. You still see it today as fonts on the computers, or in outdoor advertising. On the right, you see the character of 家 again.

Let’s compare these styles of Chinese characters: Here below are the signs of the Oracle bones (most left), Bronze inscriptions (center left), Small seal script (center right) and Clerical script (most right): On the top 龙 (dragon) and on the bottom 鱼 (fish).

Cursive script Chinese character style (草书Cǎo shū)

We think this style of Chinese characters belongs to crazy students! It’s very wild and creative, but very hard to read. When we at GoEast with our teachers talk about this style, we wonder if we can just write anything and say it’s a Cǎo shū character. Do you know the middle Chinese characters? We’ve repeated it many times in this article: 家.

Regular script Chinese characters (楷书Kǎi shū)

If the above is a crazy student, this is a good student. These characters are very clear and easy to read, and also popular today. On the left you see 心, on the right 几 but in its traditional form: 幾. Calligrafists often prefer traditional characters because they have more strokes compared to simplified characters. Simple characters are difficult to write beautifully.

Semi-cursive script Chinese characters (行书 Xíng shū)

And then we have semi-cursive script, a mixture of cursive and regular styles. This is our most favorite style. This piece below is the best piece of calligraphy in Chinese, and contains 323 words in Xíng shū characters.

Then we compare the characters once more, again 龙 and 鱼, from left to right: Oracle bones, bronze inscriptions, small seal script, clerical script, regular script, semi-cursive script, and cursive script.

Writing a Chinese character

Each Chinese character has two parts: radicals which assist meaning and pronunciation, and components which make a character distinctive. And each character has strokes. This character 汉 has 5 strokes! They are numbered 1 to 5, which is the order in which they should be written. Following the right order will make it easier for you to memorize Chinese characters and write them correctly.

Here we have the stroke orders for 二 (two), 雨 (rain), 家 (home, family), and 爽 (feel good). The character for two only has two strokes, but ‘feel good’ has 12!

Here are the radicals of 草 (grass), which is written on the top, with the part of the Chinese characters of grass, flower, apple, medicine, lotus, and spinach.

Here are the radicals for ice (left) and water (right), which look eerily alike. Chinese characters with the water radical are: ice, cold, freeze, clean, times, and Xian (name). For ice they are: river, lake, ocean, juice, and wash.

Then there are also Chinese characters which fit together or are still pictures. See here 从 (from) 众 (crowd)，木 (wood) 林 (tree) 森 (forest) 休 (rest) 云 (cloud) 哈 (hah) 坐 (sit) 伞 (umbrella).

Traditional versus simplified characters

This is a common question. They are somewhat similar! Today, traditional characters are commonly used in Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan. Simplified characters were introduced in China after the 1950s and replaced thousands of traditional Chinese characters, and make up most Mandarin language in mainland China today, and they’re also commonly used in Singapore and Malaysia. In GoEast Mandarin’s courses we primarily use simplified characters, but if you have questions about traditional ones, we can also answer that.

Here is one sample of the sign for door: 門 (traditional) and 门 (simplified)

Some tips for writing Chinese characters

A sharp pen (e.g. Uni-ball eye), it makes it easier to write clear Chinese characters

Inside Pleco is stroke order, or download an app called ‘Chinese stroke order’

Practice, practice, practice

Join GoEast’s Hanzi course to learn Chinese characters!

Learning Chinese Characters with Pleco

Perhaps the most frustrating aspect of learning Chinese is the hard-to-learn, easy-to-forget nature of Chinese characters. It takes a good deal of repetitive learning to memorize new words, yet if you’re not careful you will have forgotten them by next week.

A great tool to help you remember Chinese characters is the Pleco dictionary app, in particular the flashcards function. Every word in the dictionary can be saved as a flashcard, allowing you to easily revise Chinese words you don’t know.

You can start a test session whenever you like (we’d recommend once every day), and the app will give you a selection of the flashcards you have saved. The great thing about the Pleco app is that the words you’ve remembered will not be asked again until a few days later. If by then you still know the word, it won’t show up until next week, etc., etc.

This way, the Chinese characters you know stay out of your way, but are still checked on every now and then. The characters you keep forgetting are repeated often, until eventually you will have learned them.

You can also add custom cards. So, if, for instance, you have trouble remembering how to say “I’ve never …” in Chinese, you can add a card with “我从来没有吃过四川菜” (I’ve never eaten Sichuanese food) as an example sentence.

The habit you’ll want yourself to get into is to review these flashcards every day. It is far more effective to practice Chinese characters every day for 30 minutes, rather than twice a week for 2 hours. Because the app sorts out which words are up for review, you don’t need to think about which words to revise. So getting into this habit is easy: You just open the app and go.

The Pleco dictionary app is available for free for both Android and iOS phones. The flashcard add-on isn’t free, but much worth it.

Memorizing Chinese characters

Do Chinese characters always make you feel like grabbing your head and screaming for mom? It’s not necessary! Chinese characters are logical，and if you can figure out how the character comes from, you won’t forget! Memorization tips based on simplified Chinese characters can go a long way.

“取”and“娶”

Do you know Character “取”？Do you know the story behind this Character? About “取”, the left part is “耳” which means ear and the right part is “又”, it means human’s right hand rather than “again” in the very beginning. There is a horrible story about this Chinese character “取”. A long time ago, there was a king who wanted to encourage his soldiers to kill more enemies, and said the more enemies you kill, the greater reward you can get. But how do you prove how many enemies a soldier kills? There weren’t any smartphones around. Soldiers had to bring back one ear of enemy as evidence. So now we have the Chinese character “取”（taking the ear by hand), which means take and fetch. Of course, “取” can also be component of other Chinese characters. For example, “娶”, which consists of “取” and “女”, means to take your girl, which means to marry a girl.

“难”and“谁”

Now that you know that “又” means right hand. Perhaps the tips below will help you tell the difference between “难” and “谁”. These two words have the same component, “隹” (zhuī), it means a bird with a short tail and is often used in Chinese characters for pronunciation, but the pronunciation of Chinese characters has also changed a lot. “难” consists of “又”and“隹”. Can you imagine if catching a bird with your hands is easy or difficult? I think you get the answer. The radical of “谁“ is “言”（language ). If someone knocks at the door, of course we have to ask “who is there”.

“左”and“右”

Although “左” and “右” seem easy. But does recognizing “左” and “右” make you look at your left and right hand for a minute? We can use our left and right hands to work and eat, because those are the two things that are most important to us. In China, majority of people eat with their right hand, so the Chinese character for “右” is followed by a “口”（kǒu；mouth）；the left hand can only work well, so the part of Chinese character for “左” is “工” from “工作”（work).

Except these, are you able to find your own effective and interesting tips for memorizing Chinese characters as well?

Chinese Hanzi characters that looks the same as their meaning

Nets and knives have in common that their Chinese Hanzi characters look like what they depict. And there are many Chinese characters like that. With these memorization tips, learning Hanzi doesn’t need to be hard.

Scroll down for our earlier posts, which includes rain and turtles.

Video about Hanzi

Here’s Lynn in our live event, explaining Chinese Hanzi characters, all the way from its history to explaining radicals and components, as well as strokes. Learn more about Chinese history, culture, characters, and calligraphy styles. Chinese Hanzi characters aren’t as difficult as you think they are!