In Mandarin Chinese, 东 (Pinyin: dōng 🔊) means “east”; also, “landlord”, “owner” or “host”.
Interesting expressions containing 东 include
- 东 + 风 = 东风 (dōngfēng): east winds (that blow in spring); figuratively, favourable situation, momentum or driving force
- 马 + 耳 + 东风 = 马耳东风 (mǎ ěr dōngfēng): not the least bit concerned. It comes from a poem by Li Bai:
世人闻此皆掉头,
有如东风射马耳。
(Shìrén wén cǐ jiē diàotóu,
yǒu rú dōngfēng shè mǎ ěr)
“When the people of this world hear this, all shake their heads,
As if the east wind shot through the horse’s ear.” - 东 ... 西 ... : “east ... west ...” a common construction implying some sort of movement from side to side, for example:
东 is a simplified form of the traditional character 東. According to Wiktionary, 東
originally represented a bag tied at both ends (like a cellophane-wrapped candy with the ends twisted), and was later borrowed phonetically to mean “east”. This borrowing may have been influenced by reinterpreting the character as the sun (日) rising behind a tree (木), which is the traditional (though incorrect) etymology, as given in Shuowen.
Lawrence J. Howell writes in his Etymological Dictionary of Han/Chinese Characters:
A depiction of a sack bound on two ends, with a stick run through it. East is either a borrowed meaning or an extended one, in the sense of the direction of the rising sun (the rays of which figuratively pierce the earth) → (in historical usage) eastern Japan.
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