Definitions

chú to mow or cut grass; hay; straw; fodder

Etymology

Simplified form of . Pictograph of a hand picking off blades of grass.

Semantic: Phonetic:

About

is the simplified form of , which was originally a pictograph of a hand picking off blades of grass. It means hay, fodder, or freshly cut grass for feeding livestock. In classical texts, the character also served as a humble first-person pronoun or as a term for a person of low status, particularly one who gathered firewood or cut grass. The simplification reduces the traditional character, which symmetrically depicted bundles of grass, to an abstract shape that retains the agricultural meaning but obscures the original image of hand-harvesting.

Etymology Hide

Oracle etymology image
Oracle (~1250-1000 BC)
Oracle etymology image
Oracle (~1250-1000 BC)
Bronze etymology image
Bronze Late Western Zhou (~800 BC)
Bronze etymology image
Bronze Late Warring States (~250 BC)
Seal etymology image
Seal Chu (Warring States: 475-221 BC)
Seal etymology image
Seal Chu (Warring States: 475-221 BC)
Seal etymology image
Seal Shuowen (~100 AD)
Clerical etymology image
Clerical Qin dynasty (221-206 BC)
Clerical etymology image
Clerical Western Han dynasty (202 BC-9 AD)
Seal etymology image
Seal Western Han dynasty (202 BC-9 AD)
Seal etymology image
Seal Western Han dynasty (202 BC-9 AD)
Traditional Modern
Simplified Modern