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Learn the stroke order of the Chinese character "倍"
The character "倍" has 10 strokes. Its radical is "亻". View the introduction of "倍"
Let's take a look at the stroke order of "倍."
丿
丨
丶
一
丶
丿
一
丨
𠃍
一
Animated demonstration of the stroke order for the Chinese character "倍"
Characters with the same pronunciation as "倍"
The basic meaning of the Chinese character "倍"
v.: double
num.: time; fold
adv.: exceptionally; extraordinarily; awfully; especially; extremely
Form words with "倍"
倍频带 octave frequency band
Example phrases using "倍"
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这台显微镜应该能放大100倍左右。
This microscope should give a magnification of about ×100.
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我们不可能将实验过程一下子扩大1,000倍。
One cannot suddenly scale up a laboratory procedure by a thousandfold.
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这些力会使弹丸内爆达到比铅高100倍的密度。
[with obj.]these forces would implode the pellet to a density 100 times higher than that of lead .
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利润显示增长了7倍,达到2亿1,800万英镑。
Profits have recorded a sevenfold increase to £218 million.
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嘴唇的敏感度是手指的200倍。
Sensitivity of the lips is 200 times higher than that of the fingers。
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这根金属线的长度是那根的3倍.
This wire is three times the length of that one.
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加班费是他正常工资的1.5倍.
The overtime rate is one and a half times normal pay.
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转换速度是2倍以上的播放速度。
Conversion speed is more than 2 times of the playback speed.
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这一数字几乎是在英国的10倍。
That's nearly 10 times the number that grow in Britain.
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其当日的换手率更是高达11倍.
Its exchange rate on that day a whopping 11 times.
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.