to tread on / to trample / to stamp / to fulfill / Taiwan pr. [dao4]

= + : Don Quixote (d) is trampling (蹈) through the aorta (ao3) practicing a folk dance (蹈) in his cowboy boots (⻊), but he finds there is a small stone in one of his boots and he has to scoop it out (舀) before he can continue.

蹈 character breakdown

to ladle out / to scoop up

= + : In the aorta (ao3), Maud Younger (y) dropped her electric razor (爫) into her mortar (臼) and now she has to scoop it out (舀).
excessive
foot / to be sufficient / ample

= + : Mnemonic symbol: a football. Zapatista Zebra (zu) wants to pimp his football (足) in the space station's kitchen (Ø2). He thinks that a few more vitamins wouldn't hurt, so he extracts the vitamins from a mandarin (口) with a syringe (龰) to inject them into his football.
Character component without intrinsic meaning

= + : Mnemonic symbol: A big, left cowboy boot with spurs and everything. Zapatista Zebra (zu) wants to enter the space station's kitchen (), but he is hold up at the barrier (止). The spurs at his cowboy boot (⻊) are not safe enough, so he has to stick a mandarin (口) on it to make them safe.

Characters with 蹈 as component

蹈 is not used as a component in another character.

Words with 蹈

dance (performance art) / dancing
to follow the compass and go with the set square (idiom); to follow the rules inflexibly / to act according to convention
lit. to jump into scalding water and plunge into raging fire (idiom) / fig. to brave any danger / to go to any lengths (for a noble cause)
lit. to move one's hands and feet about (idiom) / fig. to dance about / to express one's feelings in body language / to gesture animatedly / (TCM) involuntary movements of the limbs
see 發揚踔厲|发扬踔厉[fa1 yang2 chuo1 li4]

Sentences with 蹈

蹈 currently does not appear in any sentence.