In ancient times, they were both "Yan". Now used as a radical. Contains the words next to the word "general": strong, makeup, general, and shape.
The stroke order of "Tuo": point, lift and vertical.
Order of strong strokes: point, lift, vertical, horizontal, vertical and horizontal.
Make-up sequence: vertical folding/bending, vertical, horizontal, skimming, skimming, skimming and horizontal.
Stroke order: point, lift, vertical, left, horizontal left/horizontal hook, point, horizontal, vertical hook and point.
The stroke order of the shape: vertical folding/bending, vertical, horizontal, skimming, horizontal, skimming, pressing and dot.
Extended data:
Radicals are defined from the perspective of word formation.
It is customary to say "left to right". This is the understanding obtained by using dichotomy to analyze the structure of Chinese characters. Because of the complex structure of Chinese characters, many Chinese characters are not symmetrical. Therefore, no longer divided into left and right sides, they are all called "radicals."
Each radical itself is a Chinese character, and it becomes an uncommon word just because the usage rate is too low or it can be replaced by other words. Because our Xinhua Dictionary and Modern Chinese Dictionary only contain commonly used Chinese characters, we can't find them.
However, they are all included in the Chinese Dictionary, that is to say, they are all Chinese characters, but examples that are not used in ancient books are extremely rare or rarely used.