The stroke order next to the big ear: horizontal fold fold hook/horizontal curve hook, vertical stroke.
阝 is a Chinese radical, pronounced fǔ. Commonly known as "soft ear knife", "double ear knife", "double ear knife", "cat ear knife", "ear knife", on the left it is "left ear knife" or "left ear knife", on the right it is "right ear knife" "Ear knife" or "right ear" has different names in different regions. It looks like a human ear, but in fact it has nothing to do with "ear".
Introduction
阝 is the radical in Chinese and is a part of the word.
The left ear knife is derived from the word "霜" (fù). The original meaning of the word "Fu" is earth mountain, so the original meaning of the character Zuoerdao is mostly related to mountains and terrain, such as "ling", "steep", "dangerous", "land", "yin", "yang", etc. Youerdao is derived from the word "邑" (yì). The word "邑" is related to the city. Therefore, the original meaning of the word Youerdao is mostly related to town and place names, such as "du", "suburb", "bang". ", "Jun", "Guo", "Zheng", etc.
Beside the left ear
Chinese Pinyin: zuǒ ěr páng
The origin of the radical: the character "霜" (fù) in regular script was deformed into the glyph written in The "阝" on the left side is generally called "left ear knife", "left ear knife", etc. The character "Fu" is pictographic, shaped like an oracle bone, like a stone slab on the edge of a mountain cliff. Original meaning: earth mountain. Therefore, the original meaning of the word "阜" (阝, next to the left ear) is mostly related to mountains, land, and terrain, such as "ling", "steep", "dangerous", "land", etc.
Interpretation: Same as "Fu". The original meaning of "Fu" is earth mountain, the pictogram of the original hillside. Later used as a radical, used on the left side of Chinese characters. Commonly known as "left ear knife side", also known as "left bag ear". For example, "ling", the original meaning is: big earth mountain.
Next to the right ear
Chinese Pinyin: yòu ěr páng
The origin of the radical: in regular script, it was deformed from the character "邑" (yì) into the glyph written in The "阝" on the right side is generally called "beside the right ear". The word "邑" is pictographic, with a wéi character on the top, indicating the territory, and a kneeling human figure on the bottom, indicating the population. Together they represent cities and towns. Therefore, the original meaning of the word "邑" (靝, next to the right ear) is mostly related to place names, states, counties, and regions, such as "du", "state", "county", "suburb", "Guo", etc.
Interpretation: Same as "Yi". The original meaning of "Yi" is country. Later used as a radical, used on the right side of Chinese characters. The word "阝" is generally related to city-states and countries, such as: state, capital, and suburbs. Some surnames are related to place names, so they also contain "阝", such as: Deng, Zheng, Guo, Xing, Zou, and Wu.