jīn / jìn
verb #4,360

Meanings

  1. 1 to bear; to endure; to withstand
  2. 2 to contain (oneself); to refrain from

Examples

Kàndào zhège chǎngmiàn, wǒ bùjīn liú xià le yǎnlèi.
Seeing this scene, I couldn't help shedding tears.
Tā jīnbuzhù xiào le chūlái.
She couldn't help bursting out laughing.
Tā shēntǐ ruò de ruòbùjīnfēng.
His body is so frail he can't take even a breeze.

Tips

usage
jīn is the 'endure / contain' reading — about what the subject can bear, physically or emotionally. It almost always appears in fixed compounds: 不禁 (cannot help [doing something]), 禁不住 (can't hold back; can't bear), 禁不起 (unable to withstand — pressure, scrutiny), 情不自禁 (overcome by emotion), 忍俊不禁 (can't help laughing), 弱不禁风 (too frail to stand a breeze).
mistakes
Tone reversal: jīn (1st tone, this entry) ≠ jìn (4th tone, see the jìn entry). The pattern is consistent — anything about prohibiting / banning / locking up is jìn; anything about being able (or unable) to endure / hold back is jīn. The two readings carry opposite forces: jìn shuts things down from the outside, jīn is what you contain from within.

Components

radical
shì
altar; show; sign
Bottom altar radical (Kangxi #113) — a pictograph of a stone altar where offerings were displayed. The indexing radical of . Marks as a sacred-and-prohibited concept: things forbidden by the gods, by ritual, or by law. Same radical heads (god), (ancestor), (pray), (blessing) — the entire ritual / spiritual family. = altar in the forest = sacred ground, hence forbidden.
semantic
lín
forest
Top — two trees, the picture of a forest (itself a semantic compound +). Carries the literal core: originally referred to the forbidden grove around a sacred altar, a forest where access was restricted. A faint phonetic link is there too (lín → jìn, regular palatalisation), so doubles as a soft sound-bearer.

Stroke Order

jīn