Tuesday, 26 May 2020

手 | shǒu

In Mandarin Chinese, (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 may be somewhat misleading (6 fingers), the “hand” radical 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 include

  • + = 手工 (shǒugōng 🔊): handwork; manually
  • + = 水手 (shuǐshǒu 🔊): saylor
  • + = 一手 (yīshǒu): single-handedly; proficiency, skill
  • + = 好手 (hǎoshǒu): expert, professional
  • + = 生手 (shēngshǒu): novice, new to a job
  • + = 国手 (guóshǒu): national champion, grand master
  • + = 出手 (chūshǒu): to sell (goods); to spend (money)
  • + = 入手 (rùshǒu): to start with, to begin with; to buy, to obtain

In Japanese, can be pronounced as te 🔊, as in 空手 karate 🔊, or shu, as in 選手 senshu 🔊 “player”.

に戻る
鷹の眼に
大魯
Te ni modoru taka no manako ni irihi kana
The sun,
In the eye of the falcon
That returned to my hand.
Tairo

Japanese has different logic (from that of Chinese), and in some compounds of 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
なくさへも
一茶
Yo no naka wa naku mushi sae mo jōzu heta
Even among insects, in this world,
Some are good at singing,
Some bad.
Issa

(All haiku translated by R.H. Blyth)

More photos related to hands, beads, hanzi and calligraphy @ Shutterstock.

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