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Learn the stroke order of the Chinese character "亦"
The character "亦" has 6 strokes. Its radical is "亠". View the introduction of "亦"
Let's take a look at the stroke order of "亦."
丶
一
丿
亅
丿
丶
Animated demonstration of the stroke order for the Chinese character "亦"
Characters with the same pronunciation as "亦"
The basic meaning of the Chinese character "亦"
adv.: also; too
Form words with "亦"
Example phrases using "亦"
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闪烁的灯光使她的脸庞显得亦真亦幻。
The flickering light made her face seem insubstantial.
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就像美国人失去了兴趣,政府亦如此。
As American interest shrivelled, so did the government's.
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你用何种量器量出,量入予你亦必如是。
With what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again.
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大智是福亦是祸
Great intelligence can be a curse as well as a blessing
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要么是去遛弯儿,亦或是去购物。
Possibly walk along the streets or even go shopping.
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英语科技文章的标题亦基本如此。
So are the titles of English scientific papers.
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其血管摄影亦显示出其高血管性。
It also showed intense vascular blush on angiography.
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商务财经网亦不负任何法律义务。
Business and finance net also does not take any legal obligation.
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在人的精神方面 亦 复 如此。
And it is not much otherwise in the mind.
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书面虽已斑驳,书页亦逐渐泛黄.
Though the binding cracks and the pages start to yellow.
Explanation of Chinese character strokes
The types of Chinese character strokes refer to the classification of basic strokes that make up Chinese characters. According to traditional classification methods, the types of Chinese character strokes can be divided into eight major categories, namely: horizontal, vertical, left-falling, right-falling, dot, lifting, hook, and turning. Here is a brief explanation of each type of stroke:
Horizontal: A straight line segment from left to right, such as the character "一".
Vertical: A vertical line segment from top to bottom, such as the character "丨".
Left-falling: A line segment that falls from top to bottom and slants to the left, such as the character "丿".
Right-falling: A line segment that falls from top to bottom and slants to the right, such as the character "乀".
Dot: A small dot, such as the character "丶".
Lifting: A line segment that falls from top to bottom and bends to the right, such as the character "㇀".
Hook: A hook shape formed at the end of a stroke, such as the character "亅".
Turning: A shape where the stroke turns in the middle, such as the character "乛".
These types of strokes can be combined to form complex Chinese characters, each composed of different strokes. Understanding the types of Chinese character strokes is very important for writing and recognizing Chinese characters.