/ de / děi
verb HSK 2 #49

Meanings

  1. 1 to obtain; to get
  2. 2 to gain; to receive
  3. 3 to score (a point); to win
  4. 4 to catch (a disease)

Examples

Tā dédào le yī gè hǎo xiāoxi.
He got some good news.
Wǒmen duì dé le sān fēn.
Our team scored three points.
Tā dé le jīnpái.
She won the gold medal.

Tips

usage
As dé, is a verb covering acquisition in many flavors: receiving (得到), scoring (得分), winning (得奖), and even contracting illness (得病). The thread is 'come into possession of', whether you wanted to or not.
mistakes
Reserve dé for the verb meaning 'to obtain/score/win'. Between a verb and its complement, switch to toneless de: (runs fast), not pǎo dé kuài. For the spoken 'have to', switch to děi: 回家 (I have to go home).

Components

radical
chì
step; left-side stride radical
Left is the step radical — a small footstep, the left half of 'to walk'. Anchors in the motion family: , , , , . The original oracle-bone showed a hand grasping a cowrie while walking — going out and getting — exactly the picture the three components recreate.
semantic
dàn
dawn; sun over horizon (graphic residue)
Middle -over- is now read as dawn, but historically it's a stylised residue of cowrie / money — the thing being obtained in the original oracle-bone scene. Modern shape is opaque, but historically grounds the meaning 'gain, acquire'. Pure semantic role; supplies no sound. The substitution of for happened during the bronze-script period.
semantic
cùn
thumb measure; hand
Bottom-right — a hand with a marker at the wrist showing the cùn 'inch' measure-point. In it functions pictographically as a hand reaching out to take. Together: going + cowrie + hand = walk out, lay your hand on it, it — exactly the action of obtaining.

Stroke Order