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Hong Kong stroke order: Prescribed mostly in modern Hong Kong. The standard character set of the Hong Kong Education Bureau is the List of Forms of Frequently Used Characters. In this standard, 艹 is written vertical–horizontal–vertical–horizontal, instead of the traditional vertical–horizontal–horizontal–vertical.
A stroke order is the order in which strokes are written to form a Chinese character. It can be expressed as a sequence of strokes. For example, "札: ㇐㇑㇓㇔㇟".[3] The stroke orders in the list of the present article are expressed with the YES stroke alphabet of 30 different strokes, a more accurate version based on the standard of GB13000.1 Character Set Chinese Character Order ...
Stroke Orders of the Commonly Used Standard Chinese Characters (simplified Chinese: 通用规范汉字笔顺规范; traditional Chinese: 通用規範漢字筆順規範; pinyin: tōngyòng guīfàn hànzì bǐshùn guīfàn) is a language standard jointly published by the Ministry of Education and the National Language Commission of China in November, 2020.
In this order, Chinese characters are sorted by their stroke count ascendingly. A character with less strokes is put before those of more strokes. [6] For example, the different characters in "漢字筆劃, 汉字笔画 " (Chinese character strokes) are sorted into "汉(5)字(6)画(8)笔(10)[筆(12)畫(12)]漢(14)", where stroke counts are put in brackets.
This order is consistent with the stroke order of the character 札 (zhá): ㇐㇑㇓㇔㇟, and as such is called the "札 order". [13] In Hong Kong and Taiwan among other places, people also use the group order of dian–heng–shu–pie–zhe (點橫豎撇折) [25]
According to experimental results, YES's one-tiered stroke-order sorting is more accurate than the traditional two-tiered stroke-count-stroke-order sorting. For example, in the traditional method, the 9 characters of " 夕夊夂久么勺凡丸及 " are not sortable, because they are all of 3 strokes and share the same stroke order code of 354 ...
The radicals are ordered first by stroke count (that is, the number of strokes required to write the radical); within a given stroke count, the radicals also have a prescribed order. [56] Every Chinese character falls (sometimes arbitrarily or incorrectly) under the heading of exactly one of these 214 radicals. [55]
Stroke order refers to the order in which the strokes of a Chinese character are written. Stroke order may also refer to: Hangul, whose letters have a stroke order; Surname stroke order, a method of listing Chinese names in order of increasing stroke count; Stroke-based sorting, a method of sorting characters in Chinese dictionaries