The radicak for this is the foot radical, and next to it is a component that looks like a track field that people run on.
Kat Flanigen
4 years ago
this character looks like a person on the left and then a ball in the middle on the right, that moves up and along with the lines of the character when the person kicks it
The radicak for this is the foot radical, and next to it is a component that looks like a track field that people run on.
this character looks like a person on the left and then a ball in the middle on the right, that moves up and along with the lines of the character when the person kicks it
when a person RUNS and kicks it
It has the foot radical and on the right, there is the bread character. When someone is hungry he/she runs for bread.
we need our “FOOT” “TO RUN”.
This character looks a foot radical, and the second part looks like a path you can RUN.
We need our ‘foot’ to run
There’s Foot radical on the left, and there’s a character that looks like a maze on the right, so then you Run in the maze.
The radical on the left means foot, which one needs to run, and also the radical on the right looks nearly like a running track.
left radical is foot and right radical seems like a track field
Foot radical on the left and to hold character is on the right.
This radical means foot and the second part of the character like 抱 which means to carry, when you are running your legs are carrying you.
It has the foot radical which helps us to RUN and sounds like the second character on the right 包 (bao) but with a ‘p’ sound.
with the “foot” radical we are running in a circle road on the right side.
the first radical has a meaning of foot and second radical looks like a paw which has same pronunciation with pao and combining them, it is pao-run
跑 combines the radicals 足 (foot) and 包 (to wrap). Picture your feet wrapped in shoes so you can ‘run’ on the road.
Picture a person running fast with their legs (足) kicking up dust while their friend (包) cheers them on.