How to write the stroke order of the word Yu: dot, dot, horizontal stroke/horizontal hook, horizontal, horizontal, vertical hook.
1. Stroke order
The concept of stroke order is the writing order of Chinese character strokes. Strokes are the points and lines that make up the glyphs of Chinese characters, and are the smallest unit of glyph structure. The order in which strokes appear when writing Chinese characters is called stroke order. The order of strokes when writing Chinese characters. Generally, it is up first then down, left first then right, outer first then inner, first middle then both sides.
It is very important to learn Chinese characters and write the basic strokes well. The horizontal strokes from left to right should be flat, and the vertical strokes should be straight from top to bottom. Write a point first lightly and then lightly, and then write a mention first lightly and then lightly. From thick to thin, it looks like a knife, and from thin to thick, it has feet. The vertical hook should be straight and the curved hook should be like a knife. The horizontal hook and horizontal folding are different, and the vertical lifting and vertical folding are different. Only by reading carefully and practicing carefully can you write the strokes correctly.
2. Basic rules
1. First horizontally and then vertically: 10. Yu et al. The same is true for words containing the above words or parts, such as wood, taro, yan, journal, and flower.
2. Leave first and then suppress: human, eight, enter, wood, etc. The same is true for words containing the above-mentioned characters or parts, such as 大, fen, 树, ai, etc.
3. Up first and then down: Er, Ding, Li, Li, Chang, Heng, etc. Some single-style characters and characters with upper-lower structure and upper-middle-lower structure generally follow this rule.
4. Left first, then right: Some single characters, left-right structure, left-center-right structure characters, most of them are from left to right. Such as Chuan, Zhou, Jiu, Gou, Bu, Shu, Yan, Fan (upper part), etc.
5. Outer first, then inner: Most of the Chinese characters that are single-body characters and characters with a surrounding structure are first outer and then inner. Such as Yue, Mu, Tong, Feng, Fan, Yong, Fu, Xu, etc.
3. Precautions for calligraphy practice
1. For beginners, it is necessary to ensure that they have consistent time to practice every day and develop a habit. It may take a period of deliberate practice. Incorporate temporary posts into your daily life, insist on practicing for one to two hours every day, and try to avoid using odd time to post temporary posts.
2. Writing exactly the same as the copybook does not mean the quality of writing has improved. Each stroke should be explained clearly, with a beginning, middle and end, instead of just writing it down in a blur.