U+554A, 啊
CJK UNIFIED IDEOGRAPH-554A

[U+5549]
CJK Unified Ideographs
[U+554B]

Translingual

edit
Stroke order
 

Han character

edit

(Kangxi radical 30, +8, 11 strokes, cangjie input 口弓中口 (RNLR), four-corner 61020, composition )

References

edit
  • Kangxi Dictionary: page 195, character 4
  • Dai Kanwa Jiten: character 3808
  • Dae Jaweon: page 416, character 5
  • Hanyu Da Zidian (first edition): volume 1, page 634, character 18
  • Unihan data for U+554A

Chinese

edit

Glyph origin

edit

Phono-semantic compound (形聲 / 形声) : semantic (mouth) + phonetic (OC *qaːl).

Etymology 1

edit
simp. and trad.

Pronunciation

edit

Note: The zero initial /∅-/ is commonly pronounced with a ng-initial /ŋ-/ in some varieties of Cantonese, including Hong Kong Cantonese.

Definitions

edit

  1. Used by itself to express surprise. ah, oh, ha
    [MSC, trad.]
    [MSC, simp.]
    Ā! Wǒ yòu yíng le! [Pinyin]
    Ha! I've won again!
  2. Used to express affirmation or exhortation.
    孩子聽話 [MSC, trad.]
    孩子听话 [MSC, simp.]
    Hǎo háizi, guāi, tīnghuà, ā! Bié kū le, ā! [Pinyin]
    Good boy, be good, be obedient okay?! Don't cry okay?!
    食飽 [Philippine Hokkien, trad.]
    食饱 [Philippine Hokkien, simp.]
    Góa chia̍h-pá--lo͘--a [Pe̍h-ōe-jī]
    I've eaten already, OK. / I'm full now, alright.

Etymology 2

edit
simp. and trad.

Pronunciation

edit

Note: The zero initial /∅-/ is commonly pronounced with a ng-initial /ŋ-/ in some varieties of Cantonese, including Hong Kong Cantonese.

Definitions

edit

  1. Used to indicate doubt or questioning. what?, huh?, eh
    什麼 [MSC, trad.]
    什么 [MSC, simp.]
    Á? Nǐ shuō shénme? [Pinyin]
    Huh? What did you say?

Etymology 3

edit
simp. and trad.

Pronunciation

edit

Definitions

edit

  1. Used to indicate puzzled surprise. what? oh? huh?
    事兒 [MSC, trad.]
    事儿 [MSC, simp.]
    Ǎ! Zhēn yǒu zhè shìr? [Pinyin]
    What? Is that really so?

Etymology 4

edit
simp. and trad.

Pronunciation

edit

Note: The zero initial /∅-/ is commonly pronounced with a ng-initial /ŋ-/ in some varieties of Cantonese, including Hong Kong Cantonese.

Definitions

edit

  1. Used to indicate agreement/approval. ah
      ―  À, hǎo ba.  ―  Well, OK.

Etymology 5

edit
simp. and trad.

Pronunciation

edit

Note: The zero initial /∅-/ is commonly pronounced with a ng-initial /ŋ-/ in some varieties of Cantonese, including Hong Kong Cantonese.

Definitions

edit

  1. Sentence-final particle expressing surprise.
      ―  Nǐ bù lái a?  ―  So you're not coming?
  2. Sentence-final particle expressing exclamation, excitement or enthusiasm.
    天兒天儿  ―  Duō hǎo de tiānr a!  ―  What a fine day!
    謝謝谢谢  ―  xièxiè a  ―  Thanks.
  3. Sentence-final particle softening the request.
    不行 [MSC, trad.]
    不行 [MSC, simp.]
    Lǎo Wáng a, zhè kě bùxíng a! [Pinyin]
    Wang, this won't do!
  4. Used in enumerations, for confirmation (often untranslated).
    [MSC, trad.]
    [MSC, simp.]
    Qián a, shū a, biǎo a, wǒ dōu diū le. [Pinyin]
    Money, books, watch, I lost everything.
  5. on and on, continuously

Usage notes

edit

In Standard Mandarin, this toneless particle is found in complementary distribution with several other particles, governed by the nature of the preceding syllable. However, this distinction is not strictly reflected in writing, and tends to an all-encompassing particle. Thus it may carry the pronunciation of any of its variants below in actual speech:

  • -ng, ci, zi, si, chi, zhi, shi + [a] → (a)
  • -a, -o, -e, -i, -ü + [a] → (ya)
  • -u, -ao + [a] → (wa)
  • -n + [a] → (na)

Synonyms

edit
  • (Cantonese)

Compounds

edit

Descendants

edit
  • English: ah (Singapore, Malaysia)

Etymology 6

edit
simp. and trad.
alternative forms

From (ha) (Chiang, 2013).

Pronunciation

edit

Definitions

edit

  1. (Hakka) Used between a verb and a complement to indicate that something has happened within a short time and/or is immediately followed by another event.

References

edit

Japanese

edit

Kanji

edit

(Hyōgai kanji)

  1. Exclamatory particle

Readings

edit
  • Go-on: (a)
  • Kan-on: (a)
  • Kun: こえ (koe, )こゑ (kowe, , historical)

Korean

edit

Hanja

edit

(a) (hangeul , revised a, McCune–Reischauer a)

  1. love

Vietnamese

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Han character

edit

: Hán Việt readings: a[2][3]
: Nôm readings: a[4][1], à[4][1], ơ[2], [1]

Interjection

edit

  1. Nôm form of a (Used in the beginning of a sentence to indicate questioning: ah, oh, ha).
    A khốn tôi !Ha! I'm so unlucky!

References

edit
  NODES
eth 1