Chen's strokes are horizontal, vertical, horizontal, horizontal, vertical, skimming and pressing.
Stroke of Chinese characters
Stroke usually refers to the uninterrupted points and lines that make up various shapes of Chinese characters, such as horizontal, vertical, left and right. It is the smallest Lian Bi unit of Chinese characters. Stroke sometimes refers to the number of strokes, such as the Chinese character stroke index in front of a word book.
When expressing these two meanings, "strokes" can also be used as "strokes", but now it is standardized as "strokes". In addition, strokes also refer to pictures with pen-and-ink strokes, usually with ancient strokes. Refers to the points, horizontal lines, straight lines, hooks, strokes and strokes that constitute Chinese characters, which are not commonly used or used at present.
Knowledge expansion:
The fonts of Chinese characters are divided into handwriting and printing. Handwriting refers to the handwritten form of characters, which is flexible and easy to express personal style. There are three kinds of calligraphy in modern China: regular script, cursive script and running script.
The strokes of handwritten Chinese characters are different due to the use of hard pen and soft pen. For example, vertical strokes written with hard pen can be divided into short vertical strokes, long vertical strokes, hanging needle strokes and hanging vertical strokes when written with soft pen. Printing refers to the printing form of characters. There are four types of modern Chinese characters: Song Style, Imitation Song Style, Regular Style and Black Style, among which Song Style and Regular Style are the most commonly used.
Before the arrangement of Chinese characters, there were great differences between the strokes and gestures of printed Song style and printed regular script, such as "i.e." and "? Namely "two glyphs".
Generally speaking, strokes are based on the mainstream fonts in printed form, and there are generally two classification methods for modern Chinese strokes: rough classification divides strokes into eight or five categories.
Detailed classification divides strokes into two categories: basic strokes and derived strokes. When writing, strokes whose direction has not changed from beginning to end are called basic strokes, and those whose direction has changed are called derived strokes.
Stroke is a continuous line written at one time when Chinese characters are written, and it is the smallest constituent unit of Chinese characters. Detailed classification divides strokes into two categories: basic strokes and derived strokes. When writing, those strokes whose direction has not changed from beginning to end are called basic strokes (that is, flat strokes), and those whose direction has changed are called derived strokes.