Street traditional Chinese characters

The traditional Chinese characters of street characters are: street, not itself.

Pinyin: Ji

Radical: line

Stroke: 12

Five strokes: TFFH

Number of strokes: 33212112112.

Four-corner number: 2 122 1Unicode

Read and write in stroke order: skimming, vertical reading, horizontal reading, vertical reading, horizontal reading and vertical reading.

Explanation:

1. From the line, Guisheng. "Street" is like a crossroad. Original meaning: four roads are connected)

2. Avenue of the city, a relatively wide road with houses on both sides, usually refers to the section where shops open. Another example: streets and alleys; Market (street; Market); Street drums (drums reported on the street); Street foundation (the street is straight. Step); Jietang (the yamen for managing roads and ditches in Beijing in Qing Dynasty); Street officials (street ambassadors). Officials responsible for patrolling city streets); Street pawn (person in charge of cleaning roads in ancient times)

3. Market. Another example: street shops (shops in the market); In the street (market); Street view (market scene); Street shops (market shops); Street slippers (street slippers). Dialect. Refers to a rogue who is wandering in the street and doing nothing); Street town (town)

4. Path.