What is the stroke order of "you"?

The basic rules for stroke order arrangement are:

1 First horizontally and then vertically: ten, yu, feng, qian, ding,

,

< p>etc. The same is true for characters containing the above-mentioned characters or parts, such as wood, taro, yan, journal, flower, sheep, etc.

2 First leave and then suppress: human, eight, enter, wood,

etc. The same is true for words containing the above-mentioned characters or parts, such as 大, fen, 树, ai, etc. Since there is no word for lifting the pen in Chinese characters, no matter whether the strokes and strokes are intersecting, separated, or connected, they are written first and then strokes.

3 Up first and then down: Er, Ding, Li, Li, Chang, Heng, etc. Some single-style characters and characters with an upper-middle-lower structure generally follow this rule.

4 Left first, then right: Some single characters, left-right structure, left-center-right structure characters, most of them are from left to right. Such as Chuan, Zhou, Jiu, Gou, Bu, Shu, Yan, Fan (upper part), etc.

5. From the outside to the inside: Most of the Chinese characters that are single-style characters and characters with a surrounding structure are from the outside first and then the inside. Such as moon, mother, tong, phoenix, fan, yong, fork, hall, calendar, lice, hydrogen, mian, blanket, go, xu, etc.

6 First in the middle and then on both sides: Xiao, Shui, Ban, Cheng, Ye, Shui, Dou, Yan, etc. What should be noted here is that the stroke order of "fire", "

" and "su" is not first in the middle and then on both sides, but the opposite.

Fire,

solemn. In addition, the same is true for "ridge (

ridge)".

7 Enter first and then close the door (that is, first outside, then inside, and then seal): Generally, it is a fully enclosed structure of parts and words. First write the three boxes above, then write the part inside the box, and finally seal. Such as Hui, Tian, ??Mu, Guo, Yuan, Nian, Chimney, Lu, etc.

In addition to the basic rules above, there are some supplementary rules. In my opinion, these rules should be taken more seriously. Because people can often master basic things, but often make mistakes in some details. These supplementary rules are sometimes the difficulty or even the key to implementing Chinese character stroke order standards.

Supplementary rules are:

Write upper right dot after 8:

Some Chinese characters or parts with upper right dots are usually followed by upper right dot. Such as Dog, Shu, Wu, Shu, Fa, You, Qiu, Dai, Ji, Xun, etc.

9. Write the internal point last:

The internal point is the point inside the main shape of the character, and is usually written last. Such as fork, fan, wei, spoon, tile, Li, rabbit, rain, potential, jade, etc. But there are some words such as 义 (

义), 丹 (

dan), MU (

MU), 戍 (

戍 ), egg (

EGG), Zhu (

Zhu) and other exceptions must be noted.

10 Right first and then left:

Some special radicals, such as "

,

", do not start left first and then right. Instead, right first and then left:

. The same is true for characters containing these parts, such as Chen, Yang, Pi, Jiao, Du, Ye, Ji, Kou, etc.

11 First inside and then outside:

For words with the structure of "下包上", write inside first and then outside. Such as Ji (

fierce), Tai (

升), You (

You), Shan (

山), 鬯 (

鬯) etc.

Words containing the surrounding structure of "

,

" should always be written in the upper right first, followed by

and

< p>. Such as Yan (

Yan), Ting (

Ting), Jian (

Jian), Guo (

Guo), Yuan (

far) etc.

The stroke order of the characters and parts surrounding the structure from "

" and "ding

" is quite special. It is neither inside first then outside nor first outside then inside, but inside and outside are staggered. "

" belongs to the left-bottom bracketing structure. First write the top inside, then write the bottom left. Such as Pi (

PI), Yi (

Yi), Kuang (

kuang), plaque (

plaque), etc. "Ding" belongs to the structure surrounded by upper and lower right. It is written as upper inner first and then lower right. If possible (

Yes).

12. Write first and then fold:

There are parts and characters composed of "prime" and "fold". Most of them write "prime" first and then "fold".

Such as dagger,

,

,

,

,

,

,

Er, Ji, Jiu, etc. This is true for characters containing the above parts or characters, such as Lao, Zhi, Ju, Dian, Qian, Fan, Yue, Yong, Tong, Nei, Feng, Hu, Badger, Ni, Yuan, Ji, Xu, etc.

However, some parts and characters must be folded first and then written. Such as Dao (

刀), Li (

力), Nai (

Nai), Wan (

万), Pi (

skin), female (

female), square (

square), tiger (

tiger), hair (< /p>

发), etc., the same applies to words containing the above words or components. Special attention must be paid to these words, and they cannot be confused with writing first and folding later.

13. Vertical first and then horizontal:

When the end of the vertical pen connects with the horizontal pen, and when the last horizontal pen connects with the vertical pen, first vertical and then horizontal. Such as soil (

土), work (

工), *** (

***), etc.

The head of the horizontal pen is connected to the vertical pen, first vertically and then horizontally. Such as "

(Occupy header)".

The long vertical and short horizontal are connected, vertical first and then horizontal. Such as "

(beside the word "北"), "

" and "

" (beside the word "北"). This is true for words containing these parts.

Some other special words should be remembered: Chou (

Chou), Guan (

Guan), Li (

里 ), hanging (

hanging).

The above 13 rules are common rules for Chinese character stroke order, but they cannot cover all rules. In fact, the stroke order of more complex Chinese characters is often a comprehensive application of these rules. For example, the character "Win" contains rules such as up first then down, first left then right, first outer then inner, first left first then stroke, and last internal point. Chinese characters are complex flat characters, and each character has its own unique physical characteristics. Mastering these rules does not necessarily mean that you can write the stroke order of all Chinese characters correctly. This requires continuous memorization, pondering and study during the writing process, especially some Chinese characters with special stroke order and complex structure. As long as you keep practicing and practicing, I believe that the stroke order of each Chinese character is not difficult to master.