The Chinese characters with the most strokes are composed of "_(dá)" and "_(duì", with a total of 84 paintings, which have been included in the TRON plan of Japan. This word is a Japanese surname, which is found in the name information of Japanese "life insurance company" and the telephone book in Tokyo, but its authenticity remains to be verified.
On June 20 10, the name of a Lamian Noodles store in Matsudo City, Chiba Prefecture used this 84-figure Chinese character as an example of using this Chinese character.
The fonts of Chinese characters are divided into handwriting and printing. Handwriting refers to the handwritten form of words, which is flexible and diverse. There are three kinds of calligraphy in modern China: regular script, cursive script and running script. The strokes of handwritten Chinese characters are different due to the use of hard pen and soft pen, such as hard pen vertical strokes, and soft pen (such as writing brush) vertical strokes include short vertical strokes, long vertical strokes, hanging needle strokes and vertical strokes.
Printing refers to the printing form of characters. There are four types of modern Chinese characters: Song Style, Imitation Song Style, Regular Style and Black Style, among which Song Style and Regular Style are the most commonly used. Before the arrangement of Chinese characters' glyphs, there were great differences in strokes and strokes between printed Song Dynasty and regular script, such as "namely" in printed regular script and "_" in printed Song Dynasty.
In order to make the printed song typeface as consistent as possible with the printed regular script font, and to make the printed song typeface close to the printed regular script font in principle, People's Republic of China (PRC), the Ministry of Culture and the China Language Reform Commission (now the State Language Commission) issued the Font Table of Printed General Chinese Characters on June 30th, 1965, which standardized the fonts of printed general Chinese characters.