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Learn the stroke order of the Chinese character "苞"
The character "苞" has 8 strokes. Its radical is "艹". View the introduction of "苞"
Let's take a look at the stroke order of "苞."
一
丨
丨
丿
𠃌
𠃍
一
乚
Animated demonstration of the stroke order for the Chinese character "苞"
Characters with the same pronunciation as "苞"
The basic meaning of the Chinese character "苞"
n.: bud
adj.: luxuriant; profuse; thick
Form words with "苞"
Example phrases using "苞"
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她正在剪掉枯死的玫瑰花苞
She was snipping a few dead heads off the roses
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轴,苞,花梗和花萼具腺柔毛。
Rachises , bracts, pedicels, and calyces glandular pilose.
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奇力康的疣苞康霜治疗扁平疣效果好吗?
Does verrucous bud Kang Shuang of Jilikang treat compressed verrucous effect?
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次总苞,小总苞次级花被,如处于复合。
A secondary involucre, as at the base of an umbel within a compound umbel.
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脚下的水仙在吐苞,带穗的落叶松摇摆不定。
The daffodil breaks under foot, and the tasselled larch.
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玫瑰花苞盛开了.
The rose bud broke into bloom.
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没有半个玫瑰苞。
No rose-bud is nigh.
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在六月里苞放;
That´s newly sprung in June;
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托苞在菊科植物,如向日葵中,承托盘花的花托上的一种膜质鳞片。
The chaffy scales on the receptacle of a flower head in a plant of the composite family as the sunflower.
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红光能提高花头的观赏品质,使花径、苞叶面积、花青素含量增加;
Red light could increase the ornamental value of flower, flower diameter, bract area, content of cyanidin were all increased.
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.