One, one pinyin: y: and
Explanation:
1, several names, the smallest positive integer (the word "one" is often used in banknotes and documents).
2. Pure; Specialty: single-minded. Single-minded
3. all; Man: All my life. A body of water.
4. Same: Same. The color is different.
5. Another: A cricket promotes knitting.
Second, the second pinyin: yǐ
Explanation:
1, the second most popular, is used as a second-order agent.
2. Party A is the nail party and Party B .. Japanese encephalitis.
3. The notation of China's ancient music score is equivalent to the notation "7".
4. Last name.
Third, pinyin: piě
Interpretation: Gu Tong "Pi", one of the main strokes of Chinese characters, inclines from upper right to lower left.
Fourth, pinyin: gǔn
Interpretation: Up and down.
Verb (abbreviation of verb) Pinyin: zh incarnation.
Explanation:
1, the symbol of sentence breaking when the ancients read.
2. Ancient times and "Lord" are the same.
6. Pinyin: jué
Interpretation: hook.
Seven, 0 Pinyin: líng
Interpretation: Same as "zero". Numeric spaces, used in numbers, are often used to indicate page numbers or years: 108 digits. 1990
Extended data
Stroke, such as horizontal line (1), vertical line (2), apostrophe (3), dot (3), zigzag (3), 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.
There are eight basic strokes in traditional Chinese characters, namely, "dot", "horizontal", "vertical", "left-handed" and "left-handed" ), mention (? ), fold (? ) and "tick (cut)" are also called "eight-character method".
196565438+1On October 30th, the People's Republic of China (PRC), the Ministry of Culture, the China Language Reform Commission, the State Language Commission, and the press and publication departments of People's Republic of China (PRC) and China published the Modern Chinese Characters Table 1988, which stipulated five basic strokes: horizontal, vertical, left and right.