How to write Tian Zi's stroke order?

How to write Tian Zi's stroke order: vertical, horizontal folding, horizontal, vertical and horizontal.

Tian introduced as follows:

Tian (Pinyin: tián) is a first-class Chinese character (commonly used), which first appeared in Shang Dynasty Oracle Bone Inscriptions and Shang Dynasty inscriptions and hieroglyphs. Its ancient glyph is like a farmland, buildings or ditches criss-crossing. The original meaning is the land where crops are planted, and then it is extended to things related to agriculture.

"Tian" is a first-class word (commonly used word) in the General Standard of Chinese. This word first appeared in Oracle Bone Inscriptions and inscriptions and hieroglyphics of Shang Dynasty. Its ancient glyph is like a farmland, buildings or ditches criss-crossing. The original meaning is the land where crops are planted.

Later, it extended to things related to agriculture. Tian is also the radical of Chinese characters, and the characters from Tian are mostly related to hunting and farming, such as Qi, Qi, Jie, Dian and Ding.

The inscriptions on bronze and seal script inherited the Oracle Bone Inscriptions glyph. Ancient books sometimes use "Tian" instead of "Yi". This is like a hunting war and the shape of a minefield. Oracle Bone Inscriptions has different forms of complexity and simplicity, but later generations mainly inherited simplified characters, only the changes of strokes in past dynasties, and the structure remains unchanged from ancient times to the present.

The development of Tian is introduced as follows:

Tian, pictograph. The glyph is like drawing nine squares on a large ridge acre, indicating that criss-crossing lines represent numerous minefields in the ridge, and some Oracle Bone Inscriptions are like deformed acres. Simplified Chinese character Oracle Bone Inscriptions simplified a building with three horizontal lines and three vertical lines into a "ten" character with one horizontal line and one vertical line.

The original meaning of its word is criss-crossing farmland, which was later extended to a verb, meaning farming, and later written as "tenancy". There are also fiefs given by ancient rulers to relatives and servants and ancient plot units.

As well as production activity units and ore-bearing zones. The inscriptions on bronze and seal script inherited the Oracle Bone Inscriptions glyph. Ancient books sometimes use "Tian" instead of "Tian". This is like a hunting war and the shape of a minefield.

These fields are described as follows:

Tian, Chinese word, Pinyin: tián dì, refers to the land where crops are planted, so it is called Tian. In addition to this meaning, there are also meanings of place, place, distance, road, realm and degree in ancient Chinese. Mainly used to refer to the land where crops are planted. It is also used for naming.