This character is an old variant of 拗 (to bend or snap something).
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history
抝 is not used independently in modern Chinese. It is an old variant of 拗 (to bend / snap; stubborn, as in 拗口 'awkward to say'). It also has a rare classical reading shēn meaning 'to strip off; to flog'. Today write 拗.
register
Variant form only — seen in old printing and etymology notes, not in modern Chinese writing.
The hand radical 扌 (side form of 手) carries the meaning: bending or snapping something is done by hand. Same radical and sense as the standard 拗 and as 折 to break.
Right side 幼 is the sound element in this variant, with a wide drift to ǎo. It carries no 'young' meaning here. The standard 拗 uses a different phonetic for the same word.
No stroke data for 抝; the glyph shown is your device font, so component strokes can't be highlighted.