The cursive script of sigh

The details of the cursive script of sigh can be seen in the picture below:

The pronunciation of sigh is: tàn, with 5 strokes.

Explanation:

1. To exhale a long breath due to depression and grief: sigh. sigh. lament. Sigh. Long sighs.

2. To make a long sound due to happiness, excitement, excitement: sigh. Admire. Admire. It’s amazing to be amazed (referring to praising the things you see for being extremely good).

3. Chant: chant. Sing and sigh three times.

Cursive script is a simplified writing form of Chinese characters and one of the "five styles" of Chinese calligraphy. It includes: Zhangcao and Jincao. What we usually call "cursive script" now refers to the "jincao" in cursive script. In Jincao, if the writing is more sloppy and wild, we call it "Dacao" or "Kangcao"; if the writing is more steady and fair than "Dacao", we call it "Xiaocao".

Jincao is in the same vein as Zhangcao and running script. Its writing style evolved from the writing styles of Zhang Cao and Xing Shu. It breaks the fixed writing patterns of formal script (seal, official script, regular script) and running script's stylized brushwork, and focuses on freehand brushwork. Because of its flexible writing and random growth, cursive writing has various styles and is full of interest.

Although cursive script has its own writing symbols, it still retains the physical characteristics of the basic strokes of regular script; more new strokes are derived based on the strokes of regular script. It also uses the method of continuous strokes and metonymy to simplify some strokes and radicals.