In Angle 2, we learned the principles governing the stroke order for Chinese characters. Another way of defining characters involves "principles of construction." In this scheme, there are six types of characters, with each type finding its meaning based on one of the following principles.
Principle 1 - The Picture Character
Picture characters are simply meant to look like the things they represent. As we mentioned before, though, many pictograms evolved over time so that the resemblance is less than obvious.
NOTEThis means that learning 2,000 characters in order to be "literate" doesn't mean learning 2,000 unrelated forms.Instead, you will learn a smaller number of basic, independent forms, then move on to more complicated characters that contain more than one basic character.
The example to the right uses colors to highlight the various "smaller" characters which combine to create the character for "clock."
Note that each of these smaller parts already means something else when standing alone.
EXAMPLE
This means "tree": (mù). Two trees together means "forest": (lín).
A third tree on top means "full of trees": (sēn).
Principle 2 - The Symbol Character
Symbol characters symbolize (what else!?) an idea or concept. Below, in the character meaning above, the vertical line and small stroke are above the horizontal line. In the character meaning below, they are underneath.
Principle 3 - The Borrowed Sound Character
Also called Sound-Loan characters, these borrow the same written form and sound of another character, but have unrelated meanings.
HUH?