to pile on top of one another

JLPT N5 7 strokes

Words with this Kanji

Usage of (céng)

The character primarily refers to physical layers or floors, such as the floors of a building or layers in food like cake. It is also used metaphorically to describe social classes or abstract layers of complexity.

Common contexts

  • Buildings: is the standard measure word for floors in a building (e.g., means ten floors).
  • Physical layers: It describes stacked or layered objects, such as cake layers or clothing layers.
  • Abstract layers: It can refer to levels or strata in society, problems, or concepts.

Collocations and patterns

  • (jǐ céng): how many layers/floors
  • (měi céng): each layer/floor
  • 层次 (bùtóng céngcì): different levels or ranks
  • 社会阶层 (shèhuì jiēcéng): social class

Nuances

When using for floors, it is a neutral and common term. For abstract uses like social classes or problem layers, it often pairs with words like (jiē) to form 阶层 (jiēcéng), emphasizing hierarchical levels.

Avoid confusing with (jí), which also means level but is more often used for grades, ranks, or stages rather than physical layers.

Example Sentences

This building has ten floors, and each floor has different offices.

The cake has three layers of chocolate and cream, very delicious.

Society is divided into different social classes, each with different

This piece of clothing has several layers and is very warm to wear.

The problem has many layers (aspects) and needs to be analyzed one by one.