duǒ​yí

munch

duo, duǒ flower

Original meaning: drooping ear of a grain

Embellishment of the character (grain), with a distinguishing short stroke on the ear of the millet plant to indicate the drooping ear. Based on the original meaning "drooping ear of a grain". The meaning later shifted to "flower" and "earlobe".

Components

丿
piě, yì line

Here used as a distinguishing short stroke to indicate the drooping ear of a millet plant.

Iconic component
grain stalk
Change in form
Due to historical stylistic changes, this component is less similar to than it was in ancient scripts.

Character Evolution

Seal form
Seal Shuowen ~100 AD
Clerical form
Clerical Western Han 202 BC-9 AD
Regular Modern

Component uses

Sound (0 of 5 verified)

Historical Pronunciations

Middle ChineseOld Chinese
Zhengzhangtoːlʔ
Unicodeduɑ̌

說文解字

《說文》:“朵,樹木垂朵朵也。从木,象形。此與采同意。”

Sources

Character origin
漢語多功能字庫
Readings & variants
Unicode
Historical pronunciations
Zhengzhang Shangfang
Historical images
Academia Sinica

cheeks Simplified

Phonosemantic compound. represents the meaning and 𦣞 represents the sound. Simplified form of .

Components

Meaning component
page
𦣞
𦣞 Sound component
chin

Sources

Readings & variants
Unicode

cheeks Traditional

Phonosemantic compound. represents the meaning and 𦣞 represents the sound.

Components

Meaning component
(head), page
𦣞
𦣞 Sound component
chin

Character Evolution

Bronze form
Bronze Early Spring and Autumn ~700 BC
Seal form
Seal Shuowen ~100 AD
Seal form
Seal Shuowen ~100 AD
Seal form
Seal Shuowen ~100 AD
Clerical form
Clerical Eastern Han 25-220 AD
Clerical form
Clerical Eastern Han 25-220 AD
Clerical form
Clerical Jin 266-420 AD
Regular Modern

Historical Pronunciations

Middle ChineseOld ChineseGloss
Baxter-Sagartyi[ɢ](r)ə chin

說文解字

《說文》:“,也。象形。頤,篆文。,籀文从首。”

Sources

Character origin
漢語多功能字庫
Readings & variants
Unicode
Historical pronunciations
Baxter-Sagart
Historical images
Academia Sinica