Calligraphy and painting: [shū huà]?
Explanation: Calligraphy and painting as works of art. ..
Wang Xiyan's "Old House" Part I: "The main room and the side room are covered with all kinds of wooden paintings and plaques."
The original meaning of word-making in books: verbs, holding a pen, writing and drawing. Glyph evolution:
The word-making books of painting are quite confusing: verbs, using brush strokes to map, indicating boundaries. Glyph evolution:
Extended data:
Explain these words:
1, classical Chinese version of Shuo Wen Jie Zi: Book, Bam Ye. From that voice.
Vernacular version of Shuo Wen Jie Zi: a book with bamboo chopsticks as the pen. The glyph takes "Yu" as the side and "Zhe" as the sound side.
2, the classical Chinese version of "Shuo Wen Jie Zi": painting, boundary also. Just like the four boundaries of the field. Yu, just draw it like this. All paintings belong to paintings.
Vernacular version of Shuo Wen Jie Zi: Draw the boundary line with strokes. Fonts are like the boundaries of the four sides of the field. Metaphor means painting with a pen. All words related to painting are bounded by "painting".
Related vocabulary explanation:
1, schoolbag [shū bāo]?
A bag made of cloth or leather, etc. , mainly used for students to go to school banquet potatoes, fashion books, stationery.
2. study room [SHFáng]?
A room for reading and writing.
3. storytelling [Shu bu sh ū]?
A generic term for a part of Quyi. Generally speaking, it refers to folk art that only talks but doesn't sing, such as talking about history in Song Dynasty and commenting on stories in Yuan Dynasty, as well as modern Suzhou storytelling and northern storytelling.
4. Picture book [huà b Ι n]?
Painting model.
5. sticker [tiqihuà]?
New Year pictures, posters, etc. On the wall is a picture of longevity.