Tian's stroke order is vertical, horizontal fold, horizontal, vertical, horizontal. 5 strokes.
Tian (Pinyin: tián) is a common standard first-level Chinese character (commonly used character). The original text of this character was first seen in oracle bone inscriptions and bronze inscriptions of the Shang Dynasty. It is a pictographic character. The shape of the ancient Chinese character is like a piece of farmland with crisscrossing streets or ditches in all directions.
The original meaning is land for growing crops, and later extended to things related to agriculture. "Tian" is also a radical of Chinese characters. The characters from "Tian" are mostly related to hunting and farming, such as: Qi, Ding, Jie, Dian, Town, etc.
The original meaning of the coined word is a farming land with crisscrossing roads. It was later extended to a verb to refer to farming, and was later written as "tenant". There are also fiefs that ancient rulers awarded to their relatives and servants, and ancient land units. It also means units of production activities and areas containing minerals. Bronze inscriptions and seal scripts continue the oracle bone inscriptions. Ancient books sometimes use the word "tian" to replace "畋".
It looks like both a hunting and fighting formation and a well field. Oracle bone inscriptions have different forms, both traditional and simplified. Later generations mainly inherited the writing method of simplified Chinese. Only the style of writing has changed throughout the ages, but the structure has remained unchanged from ancient to modern times. The original meaning of "field" refers to land used for farming. ?
Interpretation of ancient books
Also the name of the state. "Yun Hui": Guangnan, Huawai, Tang Kaimandong was placed.
Also called grass name. "Erya·Shicao": Huang Shou Tian. Note: It looks like oats, like hummus, edible, and grows in waste fields. A keeper.
Also from He Yan's "Ode to Jingfu Palace": Piantian Xu attached. Note: Zhitian Xufu is also listed as a relative.
Also "Li·Wen Ming": The fields are like broken walls. Shu: It is said that the desire will fall.
It also looks like lotus leaves. "Jiangnan Song": Lotus can be picked in the south of the Yangtze River, and there are fields of lotus leaves.