Writing • Character Types • Type 1 of 6
Pictographic Chinese Characters (象形字)
象形字 (xiàngxíng zì) — Pictographic characters are the oldest type of Chinese character, evolved from simplified drawings of physical objects. They form the visual foundation of the entire writing system.
Characters that began as drawings
Pictographic characters (象形字) started as drawings carved into oracle bones and bronze vessels over 3,000 years ago. Over centuries of writing, these drawings were simplified into the angular, structured characters we use today. The pictorial origin is often still visible if you know what to look for.
While pictographic characters make up only about 4% of modern Chinese characters, they are disproportionately important — they form the semantic roots (radicals) from which the other 96% are built.
18 Pictographic Characters
| Character | Pīnyīn | Meaning | Pictorial Origin |
|---|---|---|---|
| 日 | rì | sun | A circle with a dot — later squared off into a rectangle. The dot became the horizontal line inside. |
| 月 | yuè | moon | A crescent moon shape, simplified over centuries into the modern form. |
| 山 | shān | mountain | Three peaks side by side — a simple silhouette of a mountain range. |
| 水 | shuǐ | water | Flowing wavy lines representing moving water. Becomes 氵 (three dots) as a radical. |
| 火 | huǒ | fire | Flames rising upward. Becomes 灬 (four dots at bottom) as a radical. |
| 木 | mù | tree / wood | A tree: vertical trunk, horizontal branches spreading left and right, roots extending downward. |
| 土 | tǔ | earth / soil | Two horizontal lines (ground layers) with a vertical line rising up — the earth and its growth. |
| 人 | rén | person | A walking human figure seen from the side — two legs striding. |
| 口 | kǒu | mouth | A simple square representing an open mouth. |
| 目 | mù | eye | An eye drawn sideways — the oval shape with a pupil, rotated 90°. |
| 手 | shǒu | hand | Fingers and palm. The three horizontal strokes = fingers, the curving stroke = palm. Becomes 扌 as a radical. |
| 耳 | ěr | ear | The outline of an ear — the outer curve, inner canal, and lobe. |
| 鸟 | niǎo | bird | A bird perched — head, beak, body, tail, and feet. Highly simplified in modern script. |
| 马 | mǎ | horse | A horse: head, mane, body, and four legs. Simplified to 5 strokes in simplified Chinese. |
| 鱼 | yú | fish | A fish seen from the side — head, scales (the field 田 in the middle), and tail fin at the bottom. |
| 牛 | niú | ox / cow | A cow's head seen from the front — the two horns are the top strokes curving outward. |
| 羊 | yáng | sheep / goat | Horns pointing upward, a face, and legs. The top two strokes represent the curved horns. |
| 龟 | guī | turtle | The outline of a turtle shell — head, shell pattern, and legs. One of the most complex pictographic characters. |
Pictographic characters make up only about 4% of Chinese characters today, but they form the building blocks for all other types. The water pictograph 水 becomes the water radical 氵 in hundreds of water-related characters. The fire pictograph 火 becomes 灬 in cooking and heat words. Learning the pictographs is learning the alphabet of the radicals.