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What's the story behind this character 盗? None of the components seems to hint at the sound, or the meaning of 'pirate/steal/rob', unless water in the upper left part and is the bottom component a corrupted version of boat 舟?

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  • “盗” (u+2f0e), composed by “冫” (u+51ab), “欠” (u+6b20) & “皿” (U+76bf) is different from “盜” (u+76dc), in which the upper left component is “氵“ (u+6c35). which one do you want to ask? Mar 3, 2021 at 12:48
  • Aren't both 盗 and 盜 the same? One is the traditional and one is "simplified" character which only omits one dot.
    – Fishuman
    Mar 3, 2021 at 13:50

1 Answer 1

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「盗」 is Simplified Chinese, the orthodox character is 「盜」.


時期
字體
字形 參考資料
(待考)

⿱㳄舟 6.32.5
合集8315
西周
⿰舟欠 逆𬅣父辛觶
集成6416
春秋
⿳𣶙火皿 秦公鎛
集成267
「盜」

盜 20.193
睡虎地秦簡
東漢
盜 春秋 昭廿年
熹平石經
盜

Barring new excavated evidence, 「盜」 is only unambiguously traceable back to around the Qín era. Under these circumstances, the standard practice is to take Shuōwén's explanation on face value:

《說文・㳄部》


盜
 

「盜」,私利物也。从「㳄」,「㳄」欲「皿」者。

「盜」, to hold selfish desires towards material goods. From semantic 「㳄」 (drool > to covet), 「㳄」 is that who wishes for 「皿」 (dishes/bowls)*.

*The ancient middle-upper classes often had expensive bronze vessels, so these are a sign of material wealth.

To covet material goods was then extended to to steal. In fact, this isn't too far off from how the glyph origin of 「羨」 (envy) is described - from semantic 「㳄」 (drool > to covet) and semantic 「羊」 (sheep), indicating the original meaning the desire for mutton.

If one wants to trace 「盜」 back to oracle bone script, it is usually explained as


⿱㳄舟
 

starting off from semantic 「㳄」 (picture of a person with an open mouth with spit coming out > to flood, overflow) and semantic 「舟」 (boat), indicating the meaning flooding (of a river).


⿳𣶙火皿
 

「㳄」 was later complexified into 「𣶙」 through the addition of another 「水」, and 「舟」 was corrupted into 「皿」.

These forms are thought to be pronounced similar to 「㳄・涎」 or 「羨」. How this then becomes the meaning and/or sound of 「盜」 is then a bit of a leap.


References:

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