Xia Dong is looking for 14 words.

Xia Dong found 14 common words: summer, winter, self, white, hundred, eye, day, mouth, one, two, three, you, factory and person.

1. There is a self in the middle of the Xia character. If you remove a horizontal line from the self, it will be white, and if you add a horizontal line above it, it will be hundred.

2. remove one apostrophe from the table, and then there is the sun and the mouth, in which the horizontal is one, two and three.

3. If you add the word "factory" to the left of the word "winter", there is a word "you" in the middle and a word "human", you can find 14 words according to this method.

Chinese characters:

Chinese characters (pinyin: hà nzi, phonetic notation: ㄏㄢˋˋˋ), also known as Chinese and Chinese characters, are recorded symbols of Chinese, and belong to morpheme syllables of ideographic characters. One of the oldest scripts in the world has a history of more than 6, years. In the form, it gradually changes from graphics to strokes, pictographs to symbols, and complexity to simplicity.

In the principle of word-formation, it is from ideographic to pictophonetic. Except for a few Chinese characters (such as "Zi", "Zi", "Zi", "Chi" and "Zi"), they are all one Chinese character and one syllable. Modern Chinese characters refer to the capitalized Chinese characters, including traditional Chinese characters and simplified Chinese characters. Modern Chinese characters evolved from Oracle Bone Inscriptions, inscriptions on bronze, seal script and seal script to official script, cursive script, regular script and running script.

Chinese characters were invented and improved by the ancestors of the Han nationality, which is an indispensable link to maintain the dialect areas of the Han nationality. The earliest existing Chinese characters are Oracle Bone Inscriptions of Shang Dynasty in about 13 BC and the later inscriptions on bronze, which evolved into the bronze inscription in the Western Zhou Dynasty, and then to the seal script and official script in the Qin Dynasty, and the official script prevailed in the Han and Wei Dynasties. At the end of the Han Dynasty, the official script was converted into block letters.

above content reference: Baidu Encyclopedia-Chinese Characters