Chinese Characters with the Grass Radical 艹

Learn Chinese characters with the grass radical 艹— plants, flowers, vegetables, and medicine, with a garden scavenger hunt activity for kids.
Quick Answer
The grass radical 艹(cǎo) sits at the top of characters like a little crown of leaves. It appears in characters related to plants, flowers, food, and medicine — making it especially useful for nature and kitchen vocabulary.

Grass / Plant Radical — 艹(cǎo)

Two sprouts side by side at the top of a character. Children often remember it as “the plant hat.”

Appears in: plants, flowers, vegetables, food, and medicine.

艹 is a compressed form of 草 (cǎo, grass)

艹 is a compressed form of 草 (cǎo, grass). It sits at the very top of characters — like a little crown of leaves or two green shoots sprouting upward.

Once children recognise 艹, they start spotting it everywhere — in nature words, food words, and even the word for medicine. This radical family is particularly rich for everyday vocabulary because so many common words involve plants.

Chinese Characters with the艹Radical

Character Pinyin Meaning Connection to plants
huā flower A blooming plant
cǎo grass Low-growing plants
chá tea Made from plant leaves
cài vegetable / dish Plants we eat
yào medicine Traditionally made from plants
píng apple (in 苹果) Fruit from a plant
grape (in 葡萄) A climbing vine plant
sprout / bud A new plant shoot
💡 Say to kids:“Two little sprouts on top — the plant hat! If a character wears the plant hat, it’s probably a plant, a vegetable, or something that grows.”

Fun Activity:Garden and Kitchen Hunt

Garden Scavenger Hunt

Take children into a garden, park, or even just look at plants around the house. Point to a flower and say 花 (huā). Find grass and say 草 (cǎo). Look at vegetables in the kitchen or at the supermarket and say 菜 (cài). Hold up a tea bag: 茶 (chá). Hold up an apple: 苹果 (píng guǒ). The discovery of the plant hat 艹 in real-world objects makes the connection memorable. Children who find the radical themselves — rather than being told — remember it far longer.

Tea Time Vocabulary

Make a cup of tea together and talk about the characters involved: 茶 (tea), 花 (flower — some teas are flower teas like jasmine), 水 (water — which connects to the 氵radical). This cross-radical connection — noticing that tea needs both a plant (艹) and water (氵) — is a wonderful observation to make with older children. It shows them how radicals reveal the logic inside the language.

Why 药 (Medicine) Has the Plant Hat

Children sometimes wonder why medicine (药, yào) has the grass radical. The answer is historical: traditional Chinese medicine was made almost entirely from plants — herbs, roots, and leaves. The radical tells you something true about the origins of the word, even today.

This is a great example of how radicals are not just visual tricks — they carry cultural and historical meaning.

 

This article is about one of the most important Chinese Radicals for Children. Have a look at all the 30 Most Important Chinese Radicals and the posters that are good for both home and classroom use. 

New to radicals? Learn the difference between piānpáng (偏旁) and bùshǒu (部首).

Further Reading

 

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