The stroke order of Pi character

?Pi’s stroke order: horizontal stroke/horizontal hook, stroke, vertical, horizontal stroke/horizontal hook, nip.

Pi, pictographic character. In the Western Zhou Dynasty bronze inscriptions, the animal skin was peeled off from You (hand). The "upper part of Figure 2" resembles the animal's head and torso, and the "middle part of Figure 2" resembles the skin being peeled off. This is the so-called "integrated pictogram". At that time, the hand could be left or right, but in the Spring and Autumn Period, it was fixed on the right. The upper body of the "Zhen Wenpi" character was written as "the upper part of Figure 3", and the head, body and skin were no longer identifiable.

During the Warring States Period, it was also used as Cun, but it did not achieve mainstream status (and Cun is a radical replacement in both form and meaning).

"Shuowen" standardizes "Picture 15", which is also called Shengsheng, which is the so-called reconstruction of reasons. After the official reform, regular script was used as the cover, and the meaning of the strokes was combined with the changes in strokes to become mark characters. The original meaning of "Shuowen" is to skin the animal.

Yunmeng Qin Bamboo Slips "Eighteen Types of Qin Laws·Tian Law": "Eat the flesh and get into the skin." Tong "bi" is a pronoun. The "Book of Changes" on silk from the Mawangdui Han Tomb says: "Gong shot the skin into the hole." The "Zhou Yi" on silk from the Mawangdui Han Tomb says: "Either drum or skin." "Used as a place name. Yunmeng Qin Slips "Chronicles": "(King Zhao) In the second year, he attacked the Pi family. " is used as a surname. The Warring States Period Han Ge "Pishi". Personal name.

Peel, the person who peels off animal leather is called skin.

Peeling and splitting is also called skin and meat. Split. If you say it, it is called leather. If you say it, it is called skin. Department. Therefore, the surface of all things is called skin. The surface of all things is also called skin.

It is also a matter of hand.