wàn
number HSK 2 #557

Meanings

  1. 1 ten thousand
  2. 2 a great number; myriad
  3. 3 absolutely; by all means

Examples

Zhè liàng chē shíwàn kuài qián.
This car costs 100,000 yuan.
Wànyī xiàyǔ zěnmebàn?
What if it rains?
Nǐ qiānwàn bùyào chídào.
You absolutely must not be late.

Tips

culture
Chinese counts in units of (10,000) where English jumps in thousands. So 100,000 is 十万 (ten ten-thousands), 1,000,000 is 百万 (hundred ten-thousands), and 100,000,000 is 亿. Mentally regrouping digits in fours instead of threes is the single trickiest big-number habit to pick up.
history
万岁 literally means 'ten thousand years' and was the ritual cry wishing the emperor eternal life — addressing anyone else as 万岁 was treasonous. The same characters are the source of Japanese banzai.
register
Two minor extra readings exist but you rarely need them. Capitalised is a Chinese surname (still read wàn). A separate reading mò survives only inside the two-character surname 万俟, historically a Xianbei tribal name. Outside that one surname, always read .

Components

radical
one; horizontal cap stroke
Top horizontal is the radical, which is how is filed for radical-browse lookup even though the body below carries most of the visual weight. It is the cap line of the figure and the only Kangxi-listable piece in the simplified silhouette.
ideograph
wàn
ten thousand (lower fused body)
The two strokes hanging from the cap are a stylised residue of the traditional scorpion body, which was borrowed phonetically to write the number ten thousand. In simplified script they collapse into this indivisible curl that no longer maps to a standalone CJK glyph.

Stroke Order

wàn