wēn
noun #32,873

Meanings

  1. 1 epidemic; pestilence; plague
  2. 2 (figuratively) dull; lackluster (of a performance)
  3. 3 (slang) stupid

Examples

Cūnlǐ nào le yī chǎng wēn.
An epidemic broke out in the village.
Zhè chǎng xì yǎn de yǒudiǎn wēn.
This scene was acted a bit listlessly.
Jī wēn bǎ zhěnggè jī chǎng dōu huǐ le.
Bird flu wiped out the whole chicken farm.

Tips

memory
The radical (sickness frame) signals every disease character in Chinese. Inside sits (warm/steamy), suggesting 'sickness from steamy, miasmic air' — exactly how pre-modern China explained epidemics. So = the radical for 'disease' + the idea of 'feverish, contagious heat'.
register
rarely stands alone in modern speech; it lives inside compounds like 瘟疫 (plague), (avian flu), (swine fever), 瘟神 (plague god — used as 'jinx, troublemaker'), and the insult (loser, dolt).

Components

radical
sickness (radical)
Outer sickness radical — a lean-to roof (广) with two added strokes that picture a person reclining on a sickbed. It indexes in the disease family: illness, pain, epidemic, itch, symptom. specifically names a deadly contagious epidemic — plague, pestilence — so the radical commits the meaning to the realm of mass illness.
phonetic
wēn
warm; gentle (here phonetic)
Inner supplies the sound directly: wēn. Same phonetic powers warm-water, contain, wipe. itself depicts (sun) over (vessel) — sunlight warming food in a bowl. Bitterly ironic semantic flavor too: the warming-vessel image gives way, in , to the unwanted heat of a feverish illness spreading through a community.

Stroke Order

wēn