measure word #30,841

Meanings

  1. 1 measure word for a stack/pad of thin items (paper, banknotes, documents)
  2. 2 (literary, pron. tà) repeated; numerous; verbose

Examples

Tā cóng chōuti lǐ náchū yīdá qián.
He pulled a stack of cash out of the drawer.
Zhuōshàng duī zhe yīdá méi pī gǎi de zuòyè.
A stack of unmarked homework was piled on the desk.

Tips

mistakes
Two readings, two meanings. As a measure word for stacks of paper, money, or napkins it is dá. The reading tà appears in literary/old usage like zátà ('chaotic, jumbled') — modern speech almost always wants dá.

Components

radical
shuǐ
water
Full-form water radical sitting on top — kept as the standalone shape rather than contracting to because here it stacks above , not against a left side. Originally signals flow and overflow: words tumbling out, papers piling up like water rising. Indexes in the water family even though the modern meanings (stack, voluble) feel disconnected.
semantic
sun; day; speak (here)
Bottom — visually the sun box, but here likely an old graphic substitute for 'to speak'. Combined with above, the earliest reading was 'water-over-mouth, words rushing out', giving the tà reading of repeated, verbose speech. The dá 'stack' sense — a pile of paper or banknotes — is a later extension from things heaped one over another.

Stroke Order