(yǎo): to bite, to nip

(yǎo) is a Chinese character meaning “to bite.” Classified as HSK Level 5 (HSK 3.0 Standard, CLEC 2022), it is composed of (semantic) and (phonetic). It ranks #1646 in character frequency (SUBTLEX-CH corpus).

Etymologically derived, mouth. Its radical form (mouth) appears in many related characters such as (kǒu, mouth), (jiào, to call, to be called), (yòu, (bound form) right).

Native pronunciation

Definitions

  1. to bite
  2. to nip

Etymology & Origin

pictophoneticmouth

Decomposition: ⿰口交 (layout: left-right)

Stroke Order

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9

Practice writing with real-time feedback — trace each stroke in the correct order and build muscle memory in the HanziFeed app.

Words & Compounds

Common Compounds

WordPinyinMeaning
yǎo jǐn yá guān(idiom) to grit one's teeth tightly
yǎo yáto clench one's teeth
齿yǎo yá qiè chǐ(idiom) to gnash one's teeth
yī kǒu yǎo dìngto arbitrarily assert
yǎo dìngto assert
yǎo hé(of uneven surfaces) to fit together
yǎo jiáoto chew
yǎo nièto gnaw
bàn lù shā chū de chéng yǎo jīnsee 半路殺出個程咬金|半路杀出个程咬金[ban4 lu4 sha1 chu1 ge4 Cheng2 Yao3 jin1]
bàn lù shā chū gè chéng yǎo jīnlit. Cheng Yaojin ambushes the enemy (saying)
fǎn yǎo yī kǒuto make a false countercharge
jǐn yǎo bù fàng(idiom) unwilling to let go
yǎo dìng yá guānsee 咬緊牙關|咬紧牙关[yao3 jin3 ya2 guan1]
yǎo dìng yá gēnsee 咬緊牙關|咬紧牙关[yao3 jin3 ya2 guan1]
chéng yǎo jīnCheng Yaojin (589-665), aka 程知節|程知节[Cheng2 Zhi1 jie2], Chinese general of the Tang dynasty
42
Total compounds
52
As first character
12
As last character
36
As middle character

appears in 42 compound words: 52 as the first character, 12 as the last, and 36 in a middle position. Compound statistics computed from SUBTLEX-CH and HSK 3.0 vocabulary data.

Strongest Collocations

Characters that most frequently co-occur with in natural Chinese text, ranked by NPMI (Normalized Pointwise Mutual Information) — a statistical measure of association strength.

dīng
0.6422,604 co-occurrences
kěn
0.6381,116 co-occurrences
0.5271,104 co-occurrences
wén
0.524862 co-occurrences
shé
0.5092,791 co-occurrences
jiáo
0.505408 co-occurrences
gǒu
0.4852,213 co-occurrences
hén
0.466996 co-occurrences
shāng
0.4492,458 co-occurrences
suì
0.4471,356 co-occurrences

Idioms & Chengyu (6)

yǎo dìng yá gēnHSK 5+

see 咬緊牙關|咬紧牙关[yao3 jin3 ya2 guan1]

phrase
yǎo dìng yá guānHSK 5+

see 咬緊牙關|咬紧牙关[yao3 jin3 ya2 guan1]

phrase
yǎojǐnyáguānHSK 5+

to grit one's teeth and bear the pain, to bite the bullet

verb
齿yǎoyáqièchǐHSK 5+

gnashing one's teeth in anger

phrase
yīkǒuyǎodìngHSK 5+

to assert resolutely and stick to one's statement

phrase

Showing 5 of 6 idioms containing .

Example Sentences

AI-Generated

妈妈嘱我要按时吃饭,注意身体健康。

mā mā yǎo zhǔ wǒ yāo àn shí chī fàn , zhù yì shēn tī jiàn kāng .

Mom reminded me to eat on time and take care of my health.

中時新聞網Mar 2026

南投焚化炉抗争者女警 赖喊“鸡尾酒疗法” 她叹卖弄

nán tóu fén huà lú kàng zhēng zhě yǎo nǚ jǐng lài hǎn jī wěi jiǔ liáo fǎ tā tàn mài nòng

Protesters at Nantou Incinerator Bite Female Police Officer; Lai Calls for "Cocktail Therapy"; She Sighs at the Grandstanding

東森新聞Mar 2026

...脚怪!国内第3例SFTS本土病例 男遭叮感染

. . . jiǎo guài ! guó nèi dì 3 lì S F T S běn tǔ bìng lì nán zāo dīng yǎo gǎn rǎn

...Tick! China's third locally transmitted case of SFTS: Man infected after being bitten

99 健康网Mar 2026

男子把手伸进鲶鱼池被突袭伤,科学解读动物伤的健康隐患!

nán zǐ bǎ shǒu shēn jìn 鲶 yú chí bèi tū xí yǎo shāng , kē xué jiě dòu dòng wù yǎo shāng de jiàn kāng yǐn huàn !

Man Bitten by Catfish After Reaching Into Tank: A Scientific Look at the Health Risks of Animal Bites!

UdnnewsindexFeb 2026

大头蛇被误认是毒蛇龟壳花 苗栗男遭蛇伤送医幸无大碍

dà tóu shé bèi wù rèn shì dú shé guī qiào huā miáo 栗 nán zāo shé yǎo shāng sòng yī xìng wú dà ài

The big-headed snake was mistaken for a poisonous snake turtle shell flower, and the Miaoli man was bitten by a snake and sent to the hospital, but fortunately, there was no serious problem

UdnnewsindexFeb 2026

中工经营权之争/中工一次告十人 宝佳集团内线交易

zhōng gōng jīng yíng quán zhī zhēng zhōng gōng yī cì gào shí rén yǎo bǎo jiā jí tuán nèi xiàn jiāo yì

The dispute over the management rights of China Industrial Industry/China Industrial Engineering sues ten people at a time to bite Baojia Group's insider trading

Tatoeba

他用牙齿碎了核桃。

Tāyòng yáchǐ yǎo suì le hétao.

He cracked the walnut with his teeth.

Tatoeba

靠!我到自己舌头了。

Kào! wǒ yǎo dào zìjǐ shétou le.

Ouch! I bit my tongue!

Tatoeba

紧牙关坚持到底!

Yǎojǐnyáguān jiānchí dàodǐ!

Grit your teeth and bear it!

Tatoeba

你真走运,因为他没你。

Nǐ zhēn zǒuyùn, yīnwèi tā méi yǎo nǐ.

You're lucky because he didn't bite you.

Character Family

Homophones — Characters pronounced yǎo

Frequently Asked Questions

What does 咬 (yǎo) mean in Chinese?
咬 (yǎo) primarily means "to bite." It is classified as HSK Level 5, making it an advanced character. It ranks #1646 in character frequency.
What's the difference between 咬 and 饺?
咬 (yǎo) and 饺 (jiǎo) are often confused. confusable. The key distinguishing feature: 口 vs 饣 (same 交 component).
How many strokes does 咬 have?
咬 is written with 9 strokes. The correct stroke order matters for recognition and handwriting speed — practice with the animated guide above to build proper technique.
What is the radical of 咬?
The radical associated with 咬 is 口 (mouth). This radical appears in many characters related to mouth.
What are the components of 咬?
咬 is composed of: 口 (semantic), 交 (phonetic). Its IDS decomposition is ⿰口交 with a left-right layout. Understanding the components helps with both memorization and recognizing related characters.
What are common words containing 咬?
Common words with 咬 include: 咬紧牙关 (yǎo jǐn yá guān, "(idiom) to grit one's teeth tightly"); 咬牙 (yǎo yá, "to clench one's teeth"); 咬牙切齿 (yǎo yá qiè chǐ, "(idiom) to gnash one's teeth"); 一口咬定 (yī kǒu yǎo dìng, "to arbitrarily assert"); 咬定 (yǎo dìng, "to assert"). There are over 42 compound words containing this character.
What characters sound the same as 咬 (yǎo)?
Several characters share the pronunciation yǎo: 妖 (goblin), 腰 (waist). Context and tones help distinguish between them in speech and writing.
Is 咬 the same in simplified and traditional Chinese?
Yes, 咬 is written the same way in both simplified and traditional Chinese.

Practice writing with real-time feedback

Trace stroke sequences, hear native pronunciation, and build lasting retention with spaced repetition in the HanziFeed app.

Character data sourced from Unihan (Unicode Consortium), SUBTLEX-CH frequency corpus (Cai & Brysbaert, 2010), and Make Me a Hanzi (stroke data). Collocation strength measured via NPMI (Normalized Pointwise Mutual Information). Verified by the HanziFeed linguistics team.

HSK classification follows the HSK 3.0 Standard (Center for Language Education and Cooperation, CLEC, 2022 revision). Idiom data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA 3.0).

Data last verified: March 2026.