"Bi" is pronounced as "Bi" and "* *" has five strokes.
1, certain: certain, inevitable, must (must), must (indispensable), inevitable, not necessarily, do it.
2. Decided, affirmed: "Foresight, victory is inevitable."
3. Stubborn: "I don't care, I will."
4. Sure enough, if: "There must be no one in the king, I would like to work for you."
For example:
1. News reports must be true and not false.
Once you break your heart and abandon your wife and children, you will be doomed in the future.
Father told eldest brother to deliver the goods on time before the end of the month.
He is too busy studying, and almost every minute counts.
Stroke usually refers to uninterrupted points and lines that make up various shapes of Chinese characters, such as horizontal (1), vertical (2), left (3), point (3) and zigzag (3). It is the smallest Lian Bi unit of Chinese characters.
The stroke order rules of Chinese characters are: first horizontal, then vertical, first left, then down, from top to bottom, from left to right, first advanced, then closed, first middle, then both sides, and from outside to inside. The order of strokes is related to the writing speed and the quality of fonts to some extent. It is also important to write in order during the exam. There are differences between the traditional stroke order of Chinese characters and the standard stroke order in different regions. Chinese mainland's stroke order standard is the stroke order standard of commonly used words in modern Chinese.