Next to the vertical center, the stroke order of

There have been many different opinions about the order of strokes of "Hu". A few days ago, our office was still arguing about this question. How to write correctly? Today, I found an article written by Mr. Li Yunlong from the Dictionary Editorial Office of People's Education Publishing House, which gave you a clear answer. Now it is reproduced as follows:

The first edition of "The Order of Modern Chinese Common Characters" written by Li Yunlong from the Dictionary Editorial Office of People's Education Publishing House

in August, 1997, the description of the order of strokes is: left point, right point and vertical. On the basis of the Modern Chinese General Character List, the Standard of the Order of Chinese Characters was compiled by the Standardization Committee of state language commission and jointly issued by state language commission and the Press and Publication Administration of the People's Republic of China. It is authoritative and should be seriously implemented in the teaching of Chinese characters.

for a long time, there have been different views on the stroke order of "scooping": "vertical, left point, right point", "left point, right point, vertical" and so on. The standard of stroke order of modern Chinese common characters conforms to the principle that stroke order writing should take care of convenience and systematicness (see Gao Gengsheng's Standard of Modern Chinese Characters, Commercial Press, 1st edition, December, 22, pages 358-359), and the standard of stroke order of "Hu" is "left point, right point and vertical", which can reflect left point and right point. Many cursive and running scripts with the word "scoop" in calligraphers of past dynasties adopted the stroke order of "left point, right point and vertical".

Some people think that "left point, right point and vertical" does not conform to the stroke order rule of "from left to right", and this view is worth discussing. There is a rule of "from left to right" in the general rule of Chinese character stroke order, but there are also special rules of Chinese character stroke order, such as the exception of "from left to right", "Zhao (left, point, lift, vertical hook, left, point), Fei (left vertical, horizontal, horizontal, right vertical, horizontal, horizontal)" and so on. Some words "don't conform" to those general rules because they need to take care of other principles such as convenience and systematicness.

Some people think that the stroke order of "scoop" is "long vertical, short vertical, point", "short vertical, long vertical, point" or "short vertical, point, long vertical", which are also inconsistent with the new norms. Their problem is that there is no stroke shape of "short vertical" in the radical of "ladle", no matter in regular script or song style, and the stroke to the left of "long vertical" should be "point", which belongs to the "left point" in "point". Some teachers pointed out that "the stroke names of Chinese characters are determined according to the stroke shapes of regular characters" when explaining the stroke order of "Hu". The implication is that the stroke on the left side of "Hu" and "Long Vertical" in Song Dynasty is "Short Vertical". This statement is also imprecise: First, the stroke names of modern Chinese characters are not only related to regular characters, but also related to the official script in modern characters. It seems that the main problem to be discussed here should not be said in this way. To be more precise, it should be "the strokes and order of a word in a certain font are determined by that font". Second, how to define the relationship between Song style and regular script? In a narrow sense, Song style is different from regular script, but in a broad sense, Song style is a kind of printed regular script, and it is also regular script. Therefore, only from the perspective of symmetry, a certain stroke of some words has the same name as regular script. For example, although the first stroke of the word "Mu" is slightly different from regular script, it is called "horizontal". Therefore, on the issue of determining the names of strokes, we should not completely oppose the regular script and the song style, nor can we completely oppose them.

In addition, some teachers talk about the order of strokes from the perspective of calligraphy skills and aesthetics. For example, "Two' points' are close to each other, and they echo each other when they are written. Naturally, they are connected to each other. After writing the' point' on the right, they will write' vertical' upward." The calligraphy skills and aesthetic rules involved in this statement are not a universal general rule. This involves not only calligraphy skills and aesthetic laws, but also specific principles such as convenience and systematicness of writing. Specific Chinese characters need to be analyzed in detail.

This article can give you a clear answer: the stroke order of "left point, right point and vertical".

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