The stroke order of the character:丨?一?ノ?丶. Name: Vertical, Horizontal Fold, Horizontal, Leaving Point.
Basic meaning:
[zhī]. 1. Alone. 2. One used for certain pairs of things. One socks, one shoes.
For animals. Used in certain appliances. For use on ships.
[zhǐ]. 1. Indicates that it is limited to a certain range. Among several chess games, he can play chess. 2. Only; only. 3. Surname.
1. First horizontally and then vertically: ten.
2. Leave first and then suppress: eight.
3. From top to bottom: two.
4. From left to right: 刂.
5. First outside and then inside: sentence.
6. First outside, then inside and then seal: country.
7. First the middle and then both sides: small.
Stroke order is related to the speed of writing and the quality of fonts to a certain extent. There are differences in the traditional stroke order of Chinese characters and the standard stroke order in various regions. The stroke order standard in Mainland China is the "Modern Chinese Common Character Stroke Order Standards".
Traditional stroke order was widely used in ancient times and is still used in the Chinese character culture circle today. The users are mainly scholars who know calligraphy, so it is also called the stroke order of calligraphy. By studying calligraphy works before the Republic of China, especially the works of famous calligraphers, it can be concluded that the stroke order has been recognized. Most of these stroke orders follow word origin, glyph structure, glyph changes or ancient methods.
Only (only, only), Pinyin: zhǐ, zhī, number of strokes: 5 strokes, radical: 口. Chinese first-level Chinese characters, number 246.