First of all, strokes
Stroke (bǐ huà) usually refers to points and lines of various shapes that make up Chinese characters, such as horizontal (1), vertical (2), left (3), point (3), fold (3) and so on. It is the smallest Lian Bi unit of Chinese characters. Stroke sometimes refers to the number of strokes, such as the Chinese character stroke index in front of a word book. When expressing these two meanings, "strokes" can also be used as "strokes", but now it is standardized as "strokes". In addition, strokes also refer to pictures with pen-and-ink strokes. This meaning is generally used in ancient books, but it is not commonly used or used now.
Second, the basic strokes of Chinese characters
There are eight basic strokes in traditional Chinese characters, namely "point (个), horizontal (个), vertical (个), left (个), lifting, folding (个) and being hooked (个).
Second, the rules of Chinese character stroke order
The stroke order rules of Chinese characters are: horizontal first and then vertical (such as "stem"), left first and then down (such as "eight"), top-down (such as "main"), left-right (such as "forest"), advanced and then collected (such as "field"), middle first and then two sides (such as "water"), such as "Zhan".
Third, the basic stroke writing of Chinese characters