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Learn the stroke order of the Chinese character "诡"
The character "诡" has 8 strokes. Its radical is "讠". View the introduction of "诡"
Let's take a look at the stroke order of "诡."
丶
㇊
丿
㇇
一
丿
𠃌
乚
Animated demonstration of the stroke order for the Chinese character "诡"
Characters with the same pronunciation as "诡"
The basic meaning of the Chinese character "诡"
adj.: deceitful; crafty; tricky; cunning; unusual; queer; peculiar
Form words with "诡"
Example phrases using "诡"
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这种奇怪的感觉被称为“诡冷觉”,
This odd sensation is called paradoxical cold.
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在我看来,它们如此诡 异地相似。
They look uncannily similar to me.
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这座机场充满了矛盾和吊诡。
The airport is full of contradictions and paradoxes.
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这似乎是个吊诡的问题。
It seems to be an ambiguous question.
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不可是一个“吊诡”!
Wittgenstein is a paradox!
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美国当前的公立教育系统,呈现着本末倒置的吊诡局面。
America's current public education system, showing the cart before the horse paradox situation.
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吊诡的是,那么多拼法里面,没有一种是真正的goodbye。
What is strange is that none of the ways he spelled it are actually the word “goodbye.
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吊诡的是,在短时期内,要捍卫资本主义恰恰意味着:国家干预。
In the short term defending capitalism means, paradoxically, state intervention.
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这就是为何对我而言,声音这麽有哲学层次的原因,但其方式却很吊诡。
This is why sound has such a philosophical dimension for me, in a paradoxical way.
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吊诡的是含有较高科技含量的厂商严重依赖销售高性能高价格的笔记本生存。
The dilemma: Big tech suppliers remain heavily reliant on sales of high-powered, high-priced laptops to drive profits.
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.