Interpretation of cursive nouns

Cursive interpretation

[cursive; Calligraphy with coherent strokes; Chinese characters written in cursive script]

Six-body Chinese character is another calligraphy font after Oracle Bone Inscriptions, Jinwen, Lishu and regular script. It is characterized by stroke connection, fast writing speed and detailed explanation of Chinese font names. The name of cursive script is cursive script after official script, which is convenient to write, so it is also called Cao Li. Emperor Gaozu Zhang loved it, and it almost got its name during the Han and Wei Dynasties. Later, I gradually got rid of Li Shu's brushwork, and the pen became more and more round, and the stroke Lian Bi was simplified and became grass. Wang Zhi and county annals of Jin Dynasty created a cursive style, and in the Tang Dynasty, Zhang Xu, Huai Su, Fei and others developed into a wild cursive style with arbitrary strokes, implicated characters and interlinked pens.

Word decomposition

The explanation of grass is the general name of plants with soft stems except trees, crops and vegetables in higher plants; Broadly speaking, it refers to plants with soft stems, including crops and vegetables: grass. Weeds. Grass and grass. Flowers and plants. Straw shoes. Caotang (a thatched cottage used by old literati to call themselves Shan Ye's residence) has its own explanatory books (books) and cost works: books. Scholarly and bookish (refers to a scholar's style in speaking, writing, painting and so on. ) bookish (refers to the reader's habit of being divorced from reality) letter: letter. Letters. Letters. Letters. File: certificate. explain