Fei Zi a*** a few strokes

Feizi has 3 strokes. Horizontal bending hook/horizontal, skimming, point.

Fei (Pinyin: fēi) is a common standard first-level Chinese character. First seen in Oracle. The original meaning refers to the action of birds flapping their wings in the air, and then expanded to the flight of other animals. Later, it can also refer to the floating of ordinary things, such as flying snow, flying catkins, etc. From this, the meanings of rapidity and suddenness are derived.

Pictographs. "Shuowen" Xiaozhuan character "fly" looks like spread wings below and a bird's head above. Spreading the wings is for flying. After the official reform, writing in regular script took off. "Simplified Chinese Character List" shortens it to "fly", leaving one wing.

The original meaning is the action of a bird flapping its wings in the air. "Shuowen": "Flying means bird flying. Duan Yucai's note: "It looks like stretching its neck and spreading its wings. "Poetry·Beifeng·Yanyan": "Yanyan is flying, but its feathers are missing." "It can then refer to the flight of other animals. Later it was extended to mean things floating in the sky. "Yi Qian": "The flying dragon is in the sky. "Such as flying snow and flying catkins. It is also derived from flying to mean fast and rapid.

"The Song of the Gale" by Liu Bang of the Han Dynasty: "The wind is blowing and the clouds are flying. "It is extended from rapid to unexpected and sudden. "Hanshu Astronomical Chronicles": "Comets are flying, and the sun and moon are eclipsing. "Fly" also means unfounded and without reason. "Book of the Later Han·Zhou Rong Biography": "If a soldier encounters a flying disaster, he will not be buried."

From the bird flying upward, the human voice rises. Liang Liu Xie of the Southern Dynasties wrote in Literary Mind and Diaolong: Rhythm of Sound: "Every sound flies... when it flies, the sound will not return." Flying later also referred to a calligraphy term, namely "flying white".