The correct way to write vertical bend: write short vertical stroke. The circle is converted into a short horizontal line. After pausing, write a short vertical stroke in the lower right corner, with a slight arc. Finally close the pen.
Pay attention to the angle when writing vertically, press the pen lightly when starting the pen, and make the overall vertical bend smaller. Strokes (bǐ huà) usually refer to the dots and lines of various shapes that form Chinese characters and are uninterrupted, such as horizontal (一), vertical (丨), left (丿), Na (?), fold (?), etc., it It is the smallest connected unit that forms the Chinese character glyph. Strokes sometimes also refer to the number of strokes. For example, there is a Chinese character stroke index on the front of a calligraphy book.
When expressing these two meanings, "stroke" can also be used as "stroke", but currently it is standardized as "stroke". In addition, "strokes" also refer to pictures drawn with pens. This meaning is generally used in "ancient strokes", which refers to the dots, horizontal strokes, straight strokes, hooks, strokes, and strokes that make up Chinese characters, which are not commonly used or used by people nowadays.
< p>There are eight basic strokes of traditional Chinese characters, namely "dot (丶), horizontal (一), vertical (丨), left (丿), Na (?), lift (?), fold (?), hook ( "亅)", also known as "Yongzi Bafa". Yongzi Bafa is a method of explaining the brushes used in block script dot painting. It is called because it takes the eight strokes of "Yong" as an example.January 30, 1965 China The "General Printing Chinese Character Font Table" issued by the Ministry of Culture of the People's Republic of China and the Chinese Character Reform Commission and the "Modern Chinese Common Character Formats" issued by the National Language and Character Working Committee and the Press and Publication Administration of the People's Republic of China in March 1988 "Table" stipulates five categories of basic strokes: horizontal, vertical, dotted, folded.
Stroke classification
Chinese character fonts are divided into two types: written and printed. . Handwriting refers to the handwriting form of text, which is flexible and diverse and easy to express personal style. There are three main types of modern Chinese handwriting: regular script, cursive script, and running script. The stroke shapes of Chinese characters vary depending on the hard and soft pens used when writing. When writing with a soft pen (such as a brush), it can also be divided into short vertical, long vertical, hanging pin vertical and hanging dew vertical strokes.
Print style refers to the printing form of text, and modern Chinese character printing is the main type. There are four types of printing styles: Song style, imitation Song style, regular style, and black style. Among them, Song style and regular style are the most commonly used printing styles. Before the arrangement of Chinese character fonts, the strokes and strokes of printed Song style and printed regular style were quite different. For example, the "ji" in printed regular style, In printed Song style, there are two fonts: "?" and "卽".