verb #15,109

Meanings

  1. 1 to insult
  2. 2 to humiliate
  3. 3 disgrace
  4. 4 dishonor

Examples

Tā juéde zhè shì yī zhǒng qíchǐdàrǔ.
He felt this was a great humiliation.
Bùyào wǔrǔ biéren de réngé.
Don't insult other people's dignity.

Tips

usage
is a bound morpheme — it almost never appears alone in modern Chinese. Common compounds: 侮辱 (wǔrǔ, to insult), 耻辱 (chǐrǔ, shame/disgrace), 凌辱 (língrǔ, to humiliate), 受辱 (shòurǔ, to be humiliated).
history
The idiom 忍辱负重 (rěnrǔfùzhòng, to endure humiliation while bearing a heavy burden) comes from the Three Kingdoms period, describing figures who swallowed their pride for a greater cause.

Components

radical
chén
5th earthly branch; clam shell
Top-left — pictograph of a clam with its hinged shell open, also used as the 5th earthly branch and a name for the dragon hour. The indexing radical here. Original interpretation: named the season for clearing weeds, so first meant 'cultivate the soil at the proper time'; 'to fail or shame' came from the failure-of-duty reading later.
semantic
cùn
inch; measure; hand-rule
Lower-right — a hand with a stroke marking the pulse-point one inch from the wrist, used pictorially for 'a hand carefully measuring or doing something with rule.' Under the clam-shell hoe imagery it gave 'work the soil by the inch / by proper measure'; the modern 'humiliate / shame' meaning grew from failing to perform that duty.

Stroke Order