What is “qiou”?












7















Apparently this character has been dubbed the character of the year (2018):



enter image description here



It's pronunciation is said to be:




qiou




but a lot of people claim it should just be pronounced the same as:







I can't find this character in the dictionary. What is it? Where did it come from?










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    qiou is not even a legal pinyin syllable

    – 炸鱼薯条德里克
    Dec 6 '18 at 9:15











  • ha I really hope that these newly coined characters could be easily typed. I like the feeling that character set is expanding(๑>؂<๑)

    – Toosky Hierot
    Dec 6 '18 at 11:38











  • Maybe, the character is newly coined, but 'qiu' or 'qiou' already existed in the northeast dialect very long time ago. We never know how to write it out, or there isn't such a character at all originally. I guess someone found it's funny and they invented a character, based off its meaning, for it then.

    – dan
    Dec 6 '18 at 11:46













  • By the way, 'qiou' has several meanings, not just 穷 and 丑. For example, 别一天竟qiou在家里啊! meaning 别天天都在家里呆着。

    – dan
    Dec 6 '18 at 11:53











  • I've never seen this. So i am a rut now…

    – xbh
    Dec 6 '18 at 12:20
















7















Apparently this character has been dubbed the character of the year (2018):



enter image description here



It's pronunciation is said to be:




qiou




but a lot of people claim it should just be pronounced the same as:







I can't find this character in the dictionary. What is it? Where did it come from?










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    qiou is not even a legal pinyin syllable

    – 炸鱼薯条德里克
    Dec 6 '18 at 9:15











  • ha I really hope that these newly coined characters could be easily typed. I like the feeling that character set is expanding(๑>؂<๑)

    – Toosky Hierot
    Dec 6 '18 at 11:38











  • Maybe, the character is newly coined, but 'qiu' or 'qiou' already existed in the northeast dialect very long time ago. We never know how to write it out, or there isn't such a character at all originally. I guess someone found it's funny and they invented a character, based off its meaning, for it then.

    – dan
    Dec 6 '18 at 11:46













  • By the way, 'qiou' has several meanings, not just 穷 and 丑. For example, 别一天竟qiou在家里啊! meaning 别天天都在家里呆着。

    – dan
    Dec 6 '18 at 11:53











  • I've never seen this. So i am a rut now…

    – xbh
    Dec 6 '18 at 12:20














7












7








7


3






Apparently this character has been dubbed the character of the year (2018):



enter image description here



It's pronunciation is said to be:




qiou




but a lot of people claim it should just be pronounced the same as:







I can't find this character in the dictionary. What is it? Where did it come from?










share|improve this question
















Apparently this character has been dubbed the character of the year (2018):



enter image description here



It's pronunciation is said to be:




qiou




but a lot of people claim it should just be pronounced the same as:







I can't find this character in the dictionary. What is it? Where did it come from?







meaning characters






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 24 '18 at 7:34







user3306356

















asked Dec 6 '18 at 9:06









user3306356user3306356

16.2k52670




16.2k52670








  • 2





    qiou is not even a legal pinyin syllable

    – 炸鱼薯条德里克
    Dec 6 '18 at 9:15











  • ha I really hope that these newly coined characters could be easily typed. I like the feeling that character set is expanding(๑>؂<๑)

    – Toosky Hierot
    Dec 6 '18 at 11:38











  • Maybe, the character is newly coined, but 'qiu' or 'qiou' already existed in the northeast dialect very long time ago. We never know how to write it out, or there isn't such a character at all originally. I guess someone found it's funny and they invented a character, based off its meaning, for it then.

    – dan
    Dec 6 '18 at 11:46













  • By the way, 'qiou' has several meanings, not just 穷 and 丑. For example, 别一天竟qiou在家里啊! meaning 别天天都在家里呆着。

    – dan
    Dec 6 '18 at 11:53











  • I've never seen this. So i am a rut now…

    – xbh
    Dec 6 '18 at 12:20














  • 2





    qiou is not even a legal pinyin syllable

    – 炸鱼薯条德里克
    Dec 6 '18 at 9:15











  • ha I really hope that these newly coined characters could be easily typed. I like the feeling that character set is expanding(๑>؂<๑)

    – Toosky Hierot
    Dec 6 '18 at 11:38











  • Maybe, the character is newly coined, but 'qiu' or 'qiou' already existed in the northeast dialect very long time ago. We never know how to write it out, or there isn't such a character at all originally. I guess someone found it's funny and they invented a character, based off its meaning, for it then.

    – dan
    Dec 6 '18 at 11:46













  • By the way, 'qiou' has several meanings, not just 穷 and 丑. For example, 别一天竟qiou在家里啊! meaning 别天天都在家里呆着。

    – dan
    Dec 6 '18 at 11:53











  • I've never seen this. So i am a rut now…

    – xbh
    Dec 6 '18 at 12:20








2




2





qiou is not even a legal pinyin syllable

– 炸鱼薯条德里克
Dec 6 '18 at 9:15





qiou is not even a legal pinyin syllable

– 炸鱼薯条德里克
Dec 6 '18 at 9:15













ha I really hope that these newly coined characters could be easily typed. I like the feeling that character set is expanding(๑>؂<๑)

– Toosky Hierot
Dec 6 '18 at 11:38





ha I really hope that these newly coined characters could be easily typed. I like the feeling that character set is expanding(๑>؂<๑)

– Toosky Hierot
Dec 6 '18 at 11:38













Maybe, the character is newly coined, but 'qiu' or 'qiou' already existed in the northeast dialect very long time ago. We never know how to write it out, or there isn't such a character at all originally. I guess someone found it's funny and they invented a character, based off its meaning, for it then.

– dan
Dec 6 '18 at 11:46







Maybe, the character is newly coined, but 'qiu' or 'qiou' already existed in the northeast dialect very long time ago. We never know how to write it out, or there isn't such a character at all originally. I guess someone found it's funny and they invented a character, based off its meaning, for it then.

– dan
Dec 6 '18 at 11:46















By the way, 'qiou' has several meanings, not just 穷 and 丑. For example, 别一天竟qiou在家里啊! meaning 别天天都在家里呆着。

– dan
Dec 6 '18 at 11:53





By the way, 'qiou' has several meanings, not just 穷 and 丑. For example, 别一天竟qiou在家里啊! meaning 别天天都在家里呆着。

– dan
Dec 6 '18 at 11:53













I've never seen this. So i am a rut now…

– xbh
Dec 6 '18 at 12:20





I've never seen this. So i am a rut now…

– xbh
Dec 6 '18 at 12:20










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















9














The character is made up for a dialectical word qiǔ.



Constructed as「⿱穷土」, the definition is dirt-poor (「穷」到吃「土」), and the prescribed reading qiou is a Fanqie-like combination of 「穷」(qiong, poor) and「丑」(chou, awkward, messed-up, ugly), because the bottom of the character resembles「丑」.



The reading「我」(I, me) is a further joke:




「我」就是「穷到吃土」or「我」就是「又穷又丑」.



(Self-deprecatingly) What is dirt poor or both poor and ugly? ME!






The word qiǔ may be written using a real character「糗」(congealed, used to describe cooked grain food like rice porridge or wheat noodles that's been left out for too long). It is said that the modern uses of qiǔ is derived from the original meaning via semantic extension:




  • 「糗」(rice or noodles that's been left out too long) > 「呆」(idle, dazed)


  • 「糗」(congealed food that's no longer suitable to eat) > 「醜」(ugly, unpleasant)



See the baidu reference. However, this may be folk etymology.






share|improve this answer

































    3















    https://www.ndtv.com/offbeat/qiou-new-chinese-character-means-dirt-poor-and-ugly-and-people-are-relating-hard-1958619



    A new Chinese character, invented by netizens, has become massively popular on social media this week - especially among self-mocking millennials. According to Shanghaiist, the character 'qiou' is a combination of three characters - 'qiong', meaning poor, 'chou', meaning ugly, and 'tu', meaning earth. Taken together, the character essentially means "poor as dirt and ugly."




    You can see this so call character as '穷' overlap 土 (imply 'dirt poor' )




    • The lower part of '穷' is '力'


    • '力' overlap 土 is 丑, therefore the whole thing not only imply 'dirt poor', it also imply 'dirt poor and ugly'



    The reading is the mix of 穷 and 丑




    穷 /qiong2/



    丑 /chou3/




    reading of 我 is a joke: 写作'穷丑' 读作 '我' (written as '穷丑' read as '我') = "I am the definition of poor and ugly"



    Since 穷 is a simplified character, the origin of this made-up character should be Mainland China.



    You can't find it in dictionary because it is not a real character.






    share|improve this answer

























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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      9














      The character is made up for a dialectical word qiǔ.



      Constructed as「⿱穷土」, the definition is dirt-poor (「穷」到吃「土」), and the prescribed reading qiou is a Fanqie-like combination of 「穷」(qiong, poor) and「丑」(chou, awkward, messed-up, ugly), because the bottom of the character resembles「丑」.



      The reading「我」(I, me) is a further joke:




      「我」就是「穷到吃土」or「我」就是「又穷又丑」.



      (Self-deprecatingly) What is dirt poor or both poor and ugly? ME!






      The word qiǔ may be written using a real character「糗」(congealed, used to describe cooked grain food like rice porridge or wheat noodles that's been left out for too long). It is said that the modern uses of qiǔ is derived from the original meaning via semantic extension:




      • 「糗」(rice or noodles that's been left out too long) > 「呆」(idle, dazed)


      • 「糗」(congealed food that's no longer suitable to eat) > 「醜」(ugly, unpleasant)



      See the baidu reference. However, this may be folk etymology.






      share|improve this answer






























        9














        The character is made up for a dialectical word qiǔ.



        Constructed as「⿱穷土」, the definition is dirt-poor (「穷」到吃「土」), and the prescribed reading qiou is a Fanqie-like combination of 「穷」(qiong, poor) and「丑」(chou, awkward, messed-up, ugly), because the bottom of the character resembles「丑」.



        The reading「我」(I, me) is a further joke:




        「我」就是「穷到吃土」or「我」就是「又穷又丑」.



        (Self-deprecatingly) What is dirt poor or both poor and ugly? ME!






        The word qiǔ may be written using a real character「糗」(congealed, used to describe cooked grain food like rice porridge or wheat noodles that's been left out for too long). It is said that the modern uses of qiǔ is derived from the original meaning via semantic extension:




        • 「糗」(rice or noodles that's been left out too long) > 「呆」(idle, dazed)


        • 「糗」(congealed food that's no longer suitable to eat) > 「醜」(ugly, unpleasant)



        See the baidu reference. However, this may be folk etymology.






        share|improve this answer




























          9












          9








          9







          The character is made up for a dialectical word qiǔ.



          Constructed as「⿱穷土」, the definition is dirt-poor (「穷」到吃「土」), and the prescribed reading qiou is a Fanqie-like combination of 「穷」(qiong, poor) and「丑」(chou, awkward, messed-up, ugly), because the bottom of the character resembles「丑」.



          The reading「我」(I, me) is a further joke:




          「我」就是「穷到吃土」or「我」就是「又穷又丑」.



          (Self-deprecatingly) What is dirt poor or both poor and ugly? ME!






          The word qiǔ may be written using a real character「糗」(congealed, used to describe cooked grain food like rice porridge or wheat noodles that's been left out for too long). It is said that the modern uses of qiǔ is derived from the original meaning via semantic extension:




          • 「糗」(rice or noodles that's been left out too long) > 「呆」(idle, dazed)


          • 「糗」(congealed food that's no longer suitable to eat) > 「醜」(ugly, unpleasant)



          See the baidu reference. However, this may be folk etymology.






          share|improve this answer















          The character is made up for a dialectical word qiǔ.



          Constructed as「⿱穷土」, the definition is dirt-poor (「穷」到吃「土」), and the prescribed reading qiou is a Fanqie-like combination of 「穷」(qiong, poor) and「丑」(chou, awkward, messed-up, ugly), because the bottom of the character resembles「丑」.



          The reading「我」(I, me) is a further joke:




          「我」就是「穷到吃土」or「我」就是「又穷又丑」.



          (Self-deprecatingly) What is dirt poor or both poor and ugly? ME!






          The word qiǔ may be written using a real character「糗」(congealed, used to describe cooked grain food like rice porridge or wheat noodles that's been left out for too long). It is said that the modern uses of qiǔ is derived from the original meaning via semantic extension:




          • 「糗」(rice or noodles that's been left out too long) > 「呆」(idle, dazed)


          • 「糗」(congealed food that's no longer suitable to eat) > 「醜」(ugly, unpleasant)



          See the baidu reference. However, this may be folk etymology.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Dec 7 '18 at 5:13

























          answered Dec 6 '18 at 9:25









          drooozedroooze

          7,5651821




          7,5651821























              3















              https://www.ndtv.com/offbeat/qiou-new-chinese-character-means-dirt-poor-and-ugly-and-people-are-relating-hard-1958619



              A new Chinese character, invented by netizens, has become massively popular on social media this week - especially among self-mocking millennials. According to Shanghaiist, the character 'qiou' is a combination of three characters - 'qiong', meaning poor, 'chou', meaning ugly, and 'tu', meaning earth. Taken together, the character essentially means "poor as dirt and ugly."




              You can see this so call character as '穷' overlap 土 (imply 'dirt poor' )




              • The lower part of '穷' is '力'


              • '力' overlap 土 is 丑, therefore the whole thing not only imply 'dirt poor', it also imply 'dirt poor and ugly'



              The reading is the mix of 穷 and 丑




              穷 /qiong2/



              丑 /chou3/




              reading of 我 is a joke: 写作'穷丑' 读作 '我' (written as '穷丑' read as '我') = "I am the definition of poor and ugly"



              Since 穷 is a simplified character, the origin of this made-up character should be Mainland China.



              You can't find it in dictionary because it is not a real character.






              share|improve this answer






























                3















                https://www.ndtv.com/offbeat/qiou-new-chinese-character-means-dirt-poor-and-ugly-and-people-are-relating-hard-1958619



                A new Chinese character, invented by netizens, has become massively popular on social media this week - especially among self-mocking millennials. According to Shanghaiist, the character 'qiou' is a combination of three characters - 'qiong', meaning poor, 'chou', meaning ugly, and 'tu', meaning earth. Taken together, the character essentially means "poor as dirt and ugly."




                You can see this so call character as '穷' overlap 土 (imply 'dirt poor' )




                • The lower part of '穷' is '力'


                • '力' overlap 土 is 丑, therefore the whole thing not only imply 'dirt poor', it also imply 'dirt poor and ugly'



                The reading is the mix of 穷 and 丑




                穷 /qiong2/



                丑 /chou3/




                reading of 我 is a joke: 写作'穷丑' 读作 '我' (written as '穷丑' read as '我') = "I am the definition of poor and ugly"



                Since 穷 is a simplified character, the origin of this made-up character should be Mainland China.



                You can't find it in dictionary because it is not a real character.






                share|improve this answer




























                  3












                  3








                  3








                  https://www.ndtv.com/offbeat/qiou-new-chinese-character-means-dirt-poor-and-ugly-and-people-are-relating-hard-1958619



                  A new Chinese character, invented by netizens, has become massively popular on social media this week - especially among self-mocking millennials. According to Shanghaiist, the character 'qiou' is a combination of three characters - 'qiong', meaning poor, 'chou', meaning ugly, and 'tu', meaning earth. Taken together, the character essentially means "poor as dirt and ugly."




                  You can see this so call character as '穷' overlap 土 (imply 'dirt poor' )




                  • The lower part of '穷' is '力'


                  • '力' overlap 土 is 丑, therefore the whole thing not only imply 'dirt poor', it also imply 'dirt poor and ugly'



                  The reading is the mix of 穷 and 丑




                  穷 /qiong2/



                  丑 /chou3/




                  reading of 我 is a joke: 写作'穷丑' 读作 '我' (written as '穷丑' read as '我') = "I am the definition of poor and ugly"



                  Since 穷 is a simplified character, the origin of this made-up character should be Mainland China.



                  You can't find it in dictionary because it is not a real character.






                  share|improve this answer
















                  https://www.ndtv.com/offbeat/qiou-new-chinese-character-means-dirt-poor-and-ugly-and-people-are-relating-hard-1958619



                  A new Chinese character, invented by netizens, has become massively popular on social media this week - especially among self-mocking millennials. According to Shanghaiist, the character 'qiou' is a combination of three characters - 'qiong', meaning poor, 'chou', meaning ugly, and 'tu', meaning earth. Taken together, the character essentially means "poor as dirt and ugly."




                  You can see this so call character as '穷' overlap 土 (imply 'dirt poor' )




                  • The lower part of '穷' is '力'


                  • '力' overlap 土 is 丑, therefore the whole thing not only imply 'dirt poor', it also imply 'dirt poor and ugly'



                  The reading is the mix of 穷 and 丑




                  穷 /qiong2/



                  丑 /chou3/




                  reading of 我 is a joke: 写作'穷丑' 读作 '我' (written as '穷丑' read as '我') = "I am the definition of poor and ugly"



                  Since 穷 is a simplified character, the origin of this made-up character should be Mainland China.



                  You can't find it in dictionary because it is not a real character.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Dec 6 '18 at 19:25

























                  answered Dec 6 '18 at 9:40









                  Tang HoTang Ho

                  27.6k1541




                  27.6k1541






























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