The character Tan is written in the order of strokes, as follows:
The order of the strokes of the character Tan is 丨, dot, ?Horizontal fold, one horizontal line, 丨vertical, ?Horizontal folding, 丨vertical, 7 .丨vertical, one horizontal, 丨vertical, ?horizontal fold, one horizontal, one horizontal, one horizontal, 丨vertical.
The origin of the character Tan
On January 28, 1956, the 23rd plenary session of the State Council passed the "Resolution on the Announcement of the Plan for Simplifying Chinese Characters."
In May 1964, the Chinese Character Reform Commission published the "General List of Simplified Characters", with a total of 2,236 characters. These are the simplified characters used in mainland China today. Among them, changing the idiom to "讠" is a method of simplifying Chinese characters by using running script and cursive script instead of regular script.
In fact, simplified characters have existed among the people for a long time in the form of vulgar characters. It was only in 1956 that the country began to standardize, and some traditional Chinese characters were officially replaced by vulgar simplified characters. In a sense, the history of the development and evolution of Chinese characters is the process of continuous simplification of Chinese characters.
Tan is a seal script character for Qin Yi, the name of the country, which was transformed into official script. When Tan was born, it was official script, and later became the current regular script. As everyone knows, Qi Heng destroyed Tan, and Tan Zi fled to Ju. Later generations took Guo as their surname, and the surname Tan came from this. However, this Tan was not that Tan. At that time, Tan Guo was not written as Tan, but as Qin Yi or Tan.
Generally speaking, the origin of the word Tan is the process of Tan - Tan Yi - Tan - Tan. It can be traced back to the oracle bone inscriptions and bronze inscriptions of the Shang Dynasty, and then developed into seal script and then official script, and finally to Current regular script.