The names of Beijing strokes: dot, horizontal, vertical, horizontal fold, horizontal, vertical hook, left, and dot.
京 (pinyin: jīng) is a first-level standard Chinese character (commonly used character) in Chinese. This character first appeared in oracle bone inscriptions in the Shang Dynasty. Its ancient character resembles a tall building, and its original meaning is a house built on a high place. As an adjective, it means tall. Since most capitals are built on high ground, "京" also refers to the capital and capital. Jing is extended from Jingcheng to specifically refer to Beijing, the capital of China, such as the Beijing-Guangzhou line.
Hieroglyphics. The character "京" in the oracle bone inscriptions depicts the shape of a tall building with a tall house built on a high platform. It may be a watchtower used to observe the enemy's situation. It is said to be a tall mound piled artificially. "Beijing" has the meaning of "tall", which is derived from its high walls and high buildings; the name of the capital of the country is also derived from its "big" meaning.
The bronze inscriptions are similar to the oracle bone inscriptions, except that two horizontal lines are added on the wall to represent windows. The characters of the Warring States period appeared to be deformed. The Chu script is consistent with the writing method of the Three-Body Stone Classic. The small seal script has changed slightly, but it still maintains the appearance of a house on a high platform. Regular script is derived from Xiaozhuan regular script and is no longer like Gaoqiu.
Influenced by ancient Chinese fonts, some calligraphy works have an extra horizontal line in the middle of the character "京", written as "_". The modern standard writing method of "京" does not have an extra horizontal line in the middle. "Zuo Zhuan·Yin Gong Year": "Invite Beijing and envoys live there, and they are called uncles in the capital." Du Yu's note: "Jing, Zhengyi. Today is Yingyang Jing County."