Radical 196

← 195 Radical 196 (U+2FC3) 197 →
(U+9CE5) "bird"
Pronunciations
Pinyin:niǎo
Bopomofo:ㄋㄧㄠˇ
Wade–Giles:niao3
Cantonese Yale:niu5
Jyutping:niu5
Japanese Kana:チョウ chō (on'yomi)
とり tori (kun'yomi)
Sino-Korean:조 jo
Hán-Việt:điểu, đeo, đéo, đẽo
Names
Chinese name(s):(鸟字旁/鳥字旁) niǎozìpáng
Japanese name(s):鳥/とり tori
Hangul:새 sae
Stroke order animation
Stroke order of the simplified form

Radical 196 or radical bird (鳥部) meaning "bird" is one of the 6 Kangxi radicals (214 radicals in total) composed of 11 strokes.

In the Kangxi Dictionary, there are 750 characters (out of 49,030) to be found under this radical.

(5 strokes), the simplified form of , is the 114th indexing component in the Table of Indexing Chinese Character Components predominantly adopted by Simplified Chinese dictionaries published in mainland China, with listed as its associated indexing component. The simplified form is derived from the cursive script form of .

Evolution

Derived characters

Strokes Characters (鳥) Characters (鸟)
+0 SC (=鳥)
+1
+2 (= -> ) (=鳧) (=鷄= -> ) (=鳳) SC (=鳩) SC (=鷄= -> )
+3 SC (=鳶) SC (=鳴) SC (=鳲)
+4 (= -> ) 鳿 (=鴃) (= -> ) JP (=鷗) SC (=鷗) SC (=鴉) SC (=鶬) SC (=鴇) SC (=鴆)
+5 (=鴽) (= -> 𪂆) (= -> ) (=鴥) JP (=鷽/鶯) SC (=鴣) SC (=鶇) SC (=鸕) SC (=鴨) SC (=鴞) SC (=鴦) SC (=鴒) SC (=鴟) SC (=鴝) SC (=鴛) SC (=鷽) SC (=鴕) SC (=鷥)
+6 (=鵅 鴹) 鴿 (=鸞) SC (=鷙) SC (=鴯) SC (=鴰) SC (=鵂) SC (=鴴) SC (=鵃) SC (=鴿) SC (=鸞) 鸿SC (=鴻)
+7 (=鵝) SC (=鵐) SC (=鵓) SC (=鸝) SC (=鵑) SC (=鵠) SC (=鵝) SC (=鵒) SC (=鷳) SC (=鵜)
+8 鵿 (=䳢) (=鷁) (=鶂) JP (=鷄=雞) (=鶯) SC (=鵡) SC (=鵲) SC (=鶓) SC (=鵪) SC (=鵾) SC (=鵯) SC (=鵬) SC (=鵮) SC (=鶉) SC (=鶊) SC (=鵷) SC (=鷫)
+9 (=鵪) SC (=鶘) SC (=鶡) SC (=鶚) SC (=鶖) SC (=鶿) SC (=鶥) SC (=鶩)
+10 鶿 (=鶿) (=鴳) (= -> ) (=鷏) (=鷉) SC (=鶻) SC (=鷊) SC (=鷂) SC (=鶲) SC (=鶹) SC (=鶺) SC (=鷁) SC (=鶼) SC (=鶴)
+11 (=鶒) SC (=鷖) SC (=鸚) SC (=鷓) SC (=鷚)
+12 (= -> ) (=鷳) SC (=鷯) SC (=鷦) SC (=鷲) SC (=鷸)
+13 鷿 (=鷿) SC (=鷺) SC (=䴉) SC (=鸇) SC (=鷹)
+14 (=鶯) SC (=鸌) SC (=鸏)
+15
+16 (=鶴)
+17 SC (=鸛) SC (=鸘)
+18
+19

Sinogram

The radical is also used as an independent Chinese character. It is one of the Kyōiku kanji or Kanji taught in elementary school in Japan.[1] It is a second grade kanji[1]


References

  1. ^ a b "The Kyoiku Kanji (教育漢字) - Kanshudo". www.kanshudo.com. Archived from the original on March 24, 2022. Retrieved 2023-05-06.

Literature