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Learn the stroke order of the Chinese character "符"
The character "符" has 11 strokes. Its radical is "竹". View the introduction of "符"
Let's take a look at the stroke order of "符."
丿
一
丶
丿
一
丶
丿
丨
一
亅
丶
Animated demonstration of the stroke order for the Chinese character "符"
Characters with the same pronunciation as "符"
The basic meaning of the Chinese character "符"
n.: tally; symbol; magic figures; charm
v.: tally/accord with; conform to
Form words with "符"
笑脸符 smiley
表情符 emoticon; emoji
催命符 magic figure drawn by Daoist/Taoist priests to hasten a person's death; nail in the coffin
象征符 symbol
格式符 layout/format character
Example phrases using "符"
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一定有人在唱片公司让自己的魔力符发挥了作用。
Someone must have their mojo working over at the record company.
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此外,停止符的数量也有冗余.
There is also a superfluity of stop signals.
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不能读取架构记录管理类别识别符.
Cannot read the governs class identifier for the schema record.
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非空的标记必须有一个关闭符.
Non - empty elements must have an end tag.
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若要移动一个分栏符,请拖动该线.
To move a column break drag the line.
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独眼老人开始画平安符,一张一千元。
The single eyed old man begin to draw the juju, it cost 1,000 each.
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一种实现“或”运算(符)的门电路.
A gate that implements the OR operator.
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你应该会看到一个DOS命令符窗口.
You should now see a cmd prompt.
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我们用抑扬符表示一算符。
We use a circumflex to indicate an operator.
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在当前插入符号的位置插入一个分行符.
Insert a line break at the current caret position.
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.