Saturday, 23 May 2026

飞 | fēi

In Mandarin Chinese, (Pinyin: fēi 🔊) is a word of many meanings. As a verb, it means “to fly”, “to flutter”, or “to evaporate”. It also could be an adjective for “fast”, “unexpected”, “unfounded”, or an adverb “very” or “extremely”.


is a simplified form of the traditional hanzi . If you look carefully, you’ll see that the traditional character contains two bits, one on top of the other. Uncle Hanzi writes “a flying bird with long neck and big wings” without specifying explicitly whether he refers to or . I see a long neck (and a long beak) and not-so-big wings in the simplified character.

Some compounds of include

  • + = 飞天 (fēitiān): to fly in the sky; to travel into space
  • + = 飞星 (fēixīng): meteor; shooting star
  • + = 飞鸟 (fēiniǎo): flying bird
  • + = 飞鱼 (fēiyú): flying fish
  • + = 飞鼠 (fēishǔ): flying squirrel; bat
  • + = 飞虫 (fēichóng): flying insect

In Japanese, is an affix that confers the meaning of flight or speed. We’ve already seen in that famous haiku:

古池や
こむ
の音
芭蕉
Furu ike ya kawazu tobikomu mizu no oto
The old pond;
A frog jumps in, —
The sound of the water.
Bashō

(Translated by R.H. Blyth)

Here, the frog (kawazu) not just enters こむ (komu) the water: it leaps in 飛こむ (tobikomu).

More photos related to flight, calligraphy and sea glass @ Shutterstock.