In Mandarin Chinese, 手 (Pinyin: shǒu 🔊) means “hand”. It also has a number of derived meanings such as “handy”, “portable”, “handwritten”, or used as a suffix to create names of specialists or experts in something.
Lawrence J. Howell writes in his Etymological Dictionary of Han/Chinese Characters:
A depiction of a hand showing the five fingers in a curved, gripping position. Extended meanings include arm; paw; foreleg; a handle; helper; a means; technique; (in board games) a move; a type; a direction; and handwriting.
Ponte Ryūrui notes:
Although the modern form of the character 手 may be somewhat misleading (6 fingers), the “hand” radical 扌 still resembles the ancient pictographs. <...> The upper stroke in standard script is the result of aesthetical modification made to the first stroke in the cursive hand which imitates the “middle finger”.
Compounds of 手 include
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In Japanese, 手 can be pronounced as te 🔊, as in 空手 karate 🔊, or shu, as in 選手 senshu 🔊 “player”.
手に戻る
大魯
Te ni modoru taka no manako ni irihi kana The sun,
Tairo
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Japanese has different logic (from that of Chinese), and in some compounds of 手 you may hear neither te nor shu. For instance, 上手 “skillful” or “good at” is pronounced jōzu but 下手 “unskilled” or “bad at” is pronounced heta:
世の中は
一茶
Yo no naka wa naku mushi sae mo jōzu heta Even among insects, in this world,
Issa
(All haiku translated by R.H. Blyth) |
More photos related to hands, beads, hanzi and calligraphy @ Shutterstock.
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