Qi’s cursive writing

Qi’s cursive writing: dot, horizontal, left, back, left, vertical.

Basic meaning:

Qi, a commonly used Chinese character (first-level character 0518), pronounced as qí, jì, zī or zhāi, was first seen in oracle bone inscriptions in the Shang Dynasty, and its original meaning is that the ears of grain are neat. , later extended to rectification, arrangement, etc.

Traditional Chinese characters: Qi, radical: Qi, pinyin: qí, jì

Strokes: 6, structure: upper and lower structure

Head and tail decomposition: Wen丨, Component decomposition: Qi

Explanation of the word group: What is the traditional Chinese calligraphy of Qi?

The traditional calligraphy of Qi is as follows:

Basic meaning:

Qi, a common Chinese character (level 0518), pronounced as qí, jì, zī or zhāi was first seen in oracle bone inscriptions in the Shang Dynasty. Its original meaning is the neatness of grain ears, and later it was extended to mean regulation, arrangement, etc.

Traditional Chinese characters: Qi, radical: Qi, pinyin: qí, jì

Strokes: 6, structure: upper and lower structure

Head and tail decomposition: Wen丨, Component breakdown: Qi

Word group explanation:

1. Qi [yīqí] means at the same time: all teams set off. The whole audience applauded. The people and luggage have arrived.

2. The same name [qímíng] has the same reputation: among the poets of the Tang Dynasty, Li Bai and Du Fu~.

3. Nanqi [nánqí] One of the Southern Dynasties, 479-502 AD, built by Xiao Daocheng. See "Southern and Northern Dynasties".

4. Gather [jùqí] (gather at the agreed place): Visitors should be at the entrance of the exhibition hall at eight o'clock.

5. Qiji [qíjí] gather; gather together: friends from all over the world ~ Beijing.