The fifth stroke of clothing is skimming.
The order of strokes for clothes is dot, horizontal, left, vertical lift, left, and hold.
Strokes usually refer to the uninterrupted points and lines of various shapes that make up Chinese characters, such as horizontal (一), vertical (丨), left (丿), dot (丶), fold (乛) Etc., it is the smallest connected unit that constitutes Chinese character glyphs.
Stroke sometimes also refers to the number of strokes. For example, there is a Chinese character stroke index in front of a calligraphy book. When expressing these two meanings, "stroke" can also be used as "stroke", but currently it is standardized as "stroke". In addition, strokes also refer to pictures drawn with pens. This meaning is generally used in ancient books, but is not commonly used or used by people nowadays.
There are eight basic strokes of traditional Chinese characters, namely "dot (丶), horizontal (一), vertical (丨), left (丿), 捺 (乀), fold (乛), bend ( ), Hook (亅)", also known as "Eight Methods of Yongzi".
On January 30, 1965, the "General Chinese Character Glyph Form for Printing" was issued by the Ministry of Culture and the Chinese Character Reform Commission, and in March 1988, the National Language Working Committee and the Chinese People's **The "Modern Chinese Common Character List" issued by the Press and Publication Administration of the People's Republic of China stipulates five categories of basic strokes: horizontal, vertical, apostrophe, dot, and fold.
Extended information
The vast, rigorous and graceful structure of Chinese characters deeply hides the aesthetic wisdom of our ancestors. It is no exaggeration to say that understanding the structural principles of Chinese characters in Chinese calligraphy can, to a certain extent, understand Chinese aesthetics.
Whether it is bronze inscriptions of the Shang and Zhou dynasties, official scripts of the Han dynasty, or regular scripts of the Tang dynasty, the principle of tying characters is to arch toward a center. When writing, strictly follow the top first, then the bottom, first the left, then the right. The order of strokes presents a compact, orderly, generous, well-proportioned and beautiful image of Chinese characters.
The structure of Chinese characters combines the ordinary with the strange, seeking victory in danger, the strong and restrained strokes of Chinese characters, the balance of hardness and softness, and the layout of calligraphy, which combines white with black and virtual and real, have greatly strengthened the connotation of Chinese character writing. Tension affects the aesthetic orientation of calligraphy. Therefore, the lack of research on Chinese characters and texts is equivalent to losing the roots of calligraphy. After all, the symbolic lines of Chinese characters cannot gain long-term vitality.
Reference: Baidu Encyclopedia - Strokes