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Zhao Wang, Sun Qian, one, two, three, four, five.
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According to the List of Common Chinese Characters in Modern Chinese, there are 3,500 commonly used Chinese characters, including 2,500 commonly used Chinese characters and 1,000 less commonly used Chinese characters.
The number of Chinese characters has changed differently over time
The Qin Dynasty's "Cangjie", "Erudition", and "Calendar" have a total of 3,300 words;
In the Han Dynasty, Yang Xiong's "Discipline and Compilation" has 5,340 words, and Xu Shen's "Shuo Wen Jie Zi" has 9,353 words;
According to the Tang Dynasty's Fengyan "Wenjian Ji Text", Jin Lu Chen's "Zilin" has 12,824 words, Yang Chengqing's "Zitong" of the Later Wei Dynasty has 13,734 words, and the "Jade Chapter" written by Gu Yewang in the Southern Dynasty is recorded to have a total of 16,917 words, and the revised "Daguangyihui Jade Chapter" on this basis is said to have 22,726 words;
In the Tang Dynasty, Sun Qiangzeng's "Jade Chapter" has 22,561 words. Sima Guangxiu's "Class Chapter" in the Song Dynasty has as many as 31,319 words, and the Song Dynasty's official Xiu's "Collection of Rhymes" contains 53,525 words, which was once the book with the most words;
The Kangxi Dictionary of the Qing Dynasty has more than 47,000 words;
In 1915, Ouyang Bocun and others compiled the "Chinese Dictionary", which has more than 48,000 words;
In 1959, the "Great Han and Dictionary" edited by Japan's Momohashi Tsuji had 49,963 words;
In 1971, Zhang Qiyun edited the "Chinese Dictionary", which has 49,888 characters;
In 1990, Xu Zhongshu's "Chinese Dictionary" had 54,678 characters;
In 1994, Leng Yulong et al. edited "The Sea of Chinese Characters" with 85,000 words.
The fifth edition of the Dictionary of Variant Characters, compiled by the education authority in Taiwan, contains 106,230 words in both orthography and variants, making it the most popular dictionary of Chinese characters.
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Chinese characters can be divided into four types: huiyi characters, signifier characters, morphophonetic characters, and pictogramsIn terms of form, Chinese characters gradually change from graphics to strokes, pictograms to symbols, and complexity to simplicity.
1. Pictograms such as the sun, moon, mountains, clouds, people, hands, oxen, claws, clothes, flowers, walks, springs, etc.
2. Refer to things such as: up, down, inch, blade, this, un, willing, etc.
3. Willing: Bing, North, Cong, Bu, Cai, Shepherd, Mo, Dusk, Xiu, Miao, Kai, Felling, Ming, Lin, Yan, Lei, etc.
4. Shape and sound: It is a method of creating Chinese characters with both shape and sound characters, such as: want, maple, lake, etc.
Classification of Chinese Character Strokes:
1. Stroke: It is the smallest unit that constitutes the glyph of italic Chinese characters. A pen shape is the shape of a stroke.
2. Main pen shape: It is the five basic pen shapes of Chinese characters: horizontal (1), vertical (丨), apostrophe, point (, , fold ( ).
3. Attached pen shape: It is a subordinate pen shape corresponding to the main pen shape.
4. Flat pen shape: It is horizontal, vertical, apostrophe, and point four main pen shapes and their corresponding attached pen shapes.
5. Folding pen shape: It is the main pen shape and its corresponding attached pen shape.
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Chinese characters can be divided into four types: huiyi characters, referring to things, morphophonetic characters, and pictographs.
From the structure, it is divided into: upper and lower structure, left and right structure, surrounding structure, and overall structure.
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Chinese characters can be divided into four types according to the font: oracle bone script, golden script, small seal and regular script.
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Chinese characters are divided into four types of structural characters: upper and lower structure, left and right structure, surrounding structure, and overall structure.
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Chinese characters can be divided into four types: huiyi characters, referring to things, morphophonetic characters, and pictographs.
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Principles of Chinese character construction: pictogram, signifier, understanding, shape and sound, transfer, and borrowing.
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Pictograms, signifiers, ideologies, shapes, sounds, transfers, and pretenses.
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Hieroglyphs, glyphs, phonetic words, ideographic words, and word for things.
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Chinese characters can be divided into pictographs, signifiers, ideographs, and phonetic characters.
Pictograms: This type of typography is based on the physical characteristics of objects, such as the sun, moon, mountains, water, etc.
Signifier: This refers to the method of expressing abstract things, using symbolic symbols, or adding symbols to pictographs to represent a certain word, such as a person writing on it, and a person writing under it.
Meaning: This kind of word-making method is to use two or several words to form a word, and combine the meaning of these words into a meaning, such as the sun and the moon together, that is, the sun and the moonlight become bright.
Shape sound: It is a specific shape or root in the text, such as Hu, this word can also be a root, combined with different attribute roots, can be synthesized into: butterfly, butterfly, lake, Hu, Hu, Go, etc., and with the same pronunciation, express different things.
Wang, Tian, 囗, Yi. 1. Wang's pinyin: wáng, wàng. >>>More
Regular script and line script, two kinds of four.
First of all, let's talk about how Chinese characters were created. >>>More
Smart ABC is good, or you can use five strokes.
From the ancient legend of Cangjie to the discovery of oracle bone inscriptions before 1400 BC, Chinese scholars have been working to unravel the mystery of the origin of Chinese characters. Regarding the origin of Chinese characters, there are various theories in ancient Chinese literature, such as "knotted rope", "gossip", "pictures", "book deeds", etc., and the legend of the Yellow Emperor's historian Cangjie making characters is also widely recorded in ancient books. Modern scholars believe that a systematic writing tool cannot be created entirely by a single person, and that Cangjie, if there is one, should be the compiler or promulgator of the text. >>>More