Extreme: Ding? Stroke: 12? Traditional: Ding? Five strokes: HNDN
Stroke order: huh? One? One? One? ㄣ? One? ノ? Hey? One? leave
Basic explanation:
Ancient cookers were round, three-legged, two-eared, square and four-footed. ? 2. metaphor for the throne and imperial industry: ding ~. Ask ~? 3. great: ~ force. ~ words. ? 4. marijuana. ? 5. Last name. ? 6. just; That is: ~ sheng.
Explain in detail:
? (pictographic. Oracle Bone Inscriptions-shaped, the upper part is like the left and right ears and abdomen of a tripod, and the lower part is like a tripod. Original meaning: ancient cookware)? Use the original meaning? . Prevalent in Shang and Zhou Dynasties. A ritual vessel used to cook or put in a ancestral temple as a memorial ceremony. Are rulers also instruments of torture used to cook people? Ding, three feet and two ears, the treasure of five flavors. -"Shuo Wen" is another example: Zhi Ding (a metaphor for three parties standing side by side, such as the three legs of Ding Zhi); Ding Xuan (D); Dingfu (Dingfu, Taifu) is an ancient cooker used to reconcile five flavors. In the past, it was used to describe a prime minister running a country. Metaphor for the emperor? . ? Such as: winning; Dingding Zhongyuan; Ding Jia (palace examination ranked first in the imperial examination); Ming Ding (the position of the emperor); Ye Ding (the great cause of emperors)? Refers to the prime minister? .