Stroke number explained

Stroke number, or stroke count, is the number of strokes of a Chinese character. It may also refer to the number of different strokes in a Chinese character set. Stroke number plays an important role in Chinese character sorting, teaching and computer information processing.[1]

Stroke numbers vary dramatically, for example, characters "丶", "一" and "乙" have only one stroke, while character "齉" has 36 strokes, and "龘" (three 龍s, dragons) 48 strokes. The Chinese character with the most strokes in the entire Unicode character set is "" (four 龍s) of 64 strokes.[2]

Stroke counting

There are effective methods to count the strokes of a Chinese character correctly. First of all, stroke counting is to be carried out on the standard regular form (楷體, 楷体) of the character, and according to its stroke order, e.g., by writing the character stroke by stroke (in one's mind). On the same stroke, the tip of the pen can only move along a path once, not allowed to go back. Strokes "㇐" (heng, 横) and "㇀" (ti, 提) are written from left to right, and strokes "㇑" (shu, 竖), "㇓" (pie, 撇), "㇔" (dian, 点) and "㇏" (na, 捺) are written from top to bottom. And if needed, a standard list of strokes or list of stroke orders issued by the authoritative institution should be consulted.[3]

If two strokes are connected at the endpoints, whether they are separated into two strokes or linked into one stroke can be judged by the following rules:

An important prerequisite for connecting two strokes into one is: the tail of the first stroke is connected with the head of the second stroke.

Some characters or components have the same shape in the China Mainland and Taiwan, but the numbers of strokes are different, such as "之 (Mainland China: ㇔㇇㇏, 3 strokes), 之 (Taiwan: ㇔㇀㇓㇏ 4)", "阝 (M: ㇌㇑, 2), 阝 (T: ㇇㇢㇑, 3)”.[4]

The number of strokes of some characters are easy to be mis-counted, such as 凹 (㇑㇅㇑㇕㇐, 5 strokes), 凸 (㇑㇐㇑㇎㇐, 5), 鼎(㇑㇕㇐㇐㇐㇞㇐㇓㇑㇐㇑㇕, 12).

Distribution of characters

In the following, there are several tables of statistical data illustrating the distributions of Chinese characters among all stroke numbers of some representative character sets.

Chart of Standard Forms of Common National Characters (Taiwan)

Chart of Standard Forms of Common National Characters (常用國字標準字體表) is a standard character set of 4,808 characters issued by the Ministry of Education of Taiwan (ROC).

Numbers of strokes and their numbers of characters in the "Common National Characters"
strokescharacters%
120.042
2170.354
3390.811
4911.893
51252.600
61593.307
72565.324
83517.300
93567.404
104048.403
114479.297
124278.881
133998.299
143427.113
153417.092
162565.324
172314.804
181453.016
191222.537
20851.768
21661.373
22511.061
23320.666
24310.645
25120.250
2650.104
2780.166
2830.062
2930.062
3010.021
3210.021

The stroke numbers of characters range from 1 to 32 strokes. The 11-strokes group has the most characters, taking 9.297% of the character set. On the average, there are 12.186 strokes per character.[5] [6]

List of Frequently Used Characters in Modern Chinese (Mainland)

The List of Frequently Used Characters in Modern Chinese (现代汉语常用字表) is a standard character set of 3,500 characters issued by the Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China, 26 Jan 1988.[7]

Numbers of strokes and their numbers of characters in the "List of Frequently-Used Characters in Modern Chinese"
strokescharacters%
120.057
2190.543
3501.429
41133.229
51514.314
62507.143
73419.743
840811.657
941511.857
1039111.171
1135010.000
123209.143
132326.629
141404.000
151263.600
16782.229
17511.457
18160.457
19200.571
20150.429
2160.171
2240.114
2310.029
2410.029

The stroke numbers of characters range from 1 to 24 strokes. The 9-strokes characters are the most, taking 11.857% of the character set. On the average, there are 9.7409 strokes per character.[8]

List of Commonly Used Characters in Modern Chinese (Mainland)

The List of Commonly Used Characters in Modern Chinese (现代汉语通用字表) is also a standard character set issued by the Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China. There are 7,000 characters, including the 3,500 characters in the List of Frequently Used Characters in Modern Chinese.[9]

Numbers of strokes and their numbers of characters in the "List of Commonly Used Characters in Modern Chinese"
strokescharacters%
120.03
2210.30
3590.84
41362.00
52012.87
63464.94
75457.79
86909.86
978511.21
1076110.87
1172610.38
126789.68
135497.84
144125.88
153314.73
162763.94
171852.64
18901.29
19811.16
20470.67
21280.41
22220.31
23120.17
2480.11
2560.085
2610.015
3010.015
3610.015

The stroke numbers of characters range from 1 to 36 strokes. The 9-strokes group has the most characters, taking 11.21% of the character set. On the average, there are 10.75 strokes per character.

Cihai

The following statistic data comes from an experiment conducted on all the 16,339 traditional and simplified characters of Cihai (1979).[10]

Numbers of strokes and their numbers of characters in Cihai
strokescharacters%
130.018
2230.141
3740.453
41630.998
52161.597
64622.828
78255.049
810846.634
912767.810
1013718.391
1114538.893
1215539.505
1313658.354
1411907.283
1511326.928
169615.882
177884.823
185693.482
194993.054
203702.265
212631.610
222081.273
231590.973
241220.747
25650.398
26360.220
27280.171
28150.092
2980.049
3060.037
3110.006
3220.012
3320.012
3510.006
3610.006

The stroke numbers of characters range from 1 to 36 strokes. The 12-strokes group has the most characters, taking 9.505% of the character set. On the average, there are 12.7061 strokes per character.

Unicode Basic CJK Unified Ideographs

The Unicode Basic CJK Unified Ideographs is an international standard character set issued by ISO and Unicode, the same character set of the Chinese national standard 13000.1. There are 20,902 Chinese characters, including simplified and traditional characters from China, Japan and Korea (CJK).[11] [12]

Numbers of strokes and their numbers of characters in the "Unicode Basic CJK Unified Ideographs"
strokescharacters%
1100.048
2440.211
3980.469
42040.976
53311.584
65832.789
79664.622
813006.220
915417.373
1017098.176
1118598.894
1219569.358
1317418.329
1415707.511
1515167.253
1612926.181
1710124.842
187713.689
196923.311
205012.397
213501.674
222741.311
231970.942
241520.727
25830.397
26480.230
27430.206
28270.129
29100.048
30100.048
3110.005
3230.014
3340.019
3510.005
3610.005
3910.005
4810.005

The stroke numbers of characters range from 1 to 48 strokes. The 12-strokes group has the most characters, taking 9.358% of the character set. On the average, there are 12.845 strokes per character.

Characteristics

From the data of the previous tables, some valuable cross-table characteristics can be found:

Stroke types

Ther term stroke number may also refer to the number of different strokes in the Chinese character writing system, or the number of stroke types in a stroke table.How many types of strokes are there in Chinese characters? Scholars’ opinions are not entirely consistent. For example, for the purpose of Chinese teaching and reference book compilation, the categories are usually relatively small; from the perspective of calligraphy art and glyph design, there are much more. For example, stroke "shu (丨)" can be further divided into "long shu", "short shu", and "hanging needle shu", etc., and "pie (丿)" can be divided into "flat pie", "slant pie", and "vertical pie".[13]

Five types

Current national standards such as "Stroke Orders of Commonly-used Standard Chinese Characters" and many reference books published in China mainland have adopted the five categories of heng (横, 一), shu (竖, 丨), pie (撇, 丿), dian (点, 丶), zhe (折,), and stipulate the heng-shu-pie-dian-zhe order. In Hong Kong, Taiwan and some other places, people also use the order of dian-heng-shu-pie-zhe [14]

Eight types

In this classification, Chinese strokes are divided into eight categories:,,,,,,, .Because the character "永" (yǒng, forever) happens to contain strokes similar to these eight types of stroke forms, this classification is also called the "Eight Principles of Yong".

Unicode CJK strokes

The Unicode CJK strokes list has 37 types of strokes, including the newly-added character subtraction at the end:

YES stroke alphabet

The YES Stroke Alphabet, which is employed by YES stroke alphabetical order, is a list of 30 strokes:[15]

㇐ ㇕ ㇅ ㇎ ㇡ ㇋ ㇊ ㇍ ㇈ ㇆ ㇇ ㇌ ㇀ ㇑ ㇗ ㇞ ㇉ ㄣ ㇙ ㇄ ㇟ ㇚ ㇓ ㇜ ㇛ ㇢ ㇔ ㇏ ㇂.

For more details about Chinese character stroke types and stroke tables, please see Chinese character strokes#Stroke form.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Su, Peicheng (苏培成) . 现代汉字学纲要 (Essentials of Modern Chinese Characters) . 商务印书馆 (Commercial Press) . 2014 . 978-7-100-10440-1 . 3rd . Beijing . zh. 74–75.
  2. https://www.unicode.org/cgi-bin/GetUnihanData.pl?codepoint=2A6A5&useutf8=true
  3. Book: PRC, National Language Commission . 通用规范汉字笔顺规范 (Stroke Orders of the Commonly-used Standard Chinese Characters). the Commercial Press. 2021 . 978-7-100-19347-4. Beijing. zh.
  4. Zhang . X. (and Cheung W. K) . 2013b . A Mainland-Taiwan Comparative Study on Standard Stroke Orders of Chinese Characters (兩岸漢字規範筆順比較) . Newsletter of Chinese Language (中國語文通訊) . 92 (2013) . 1 . 17–26.
  5. Book: Taiwan, 國語推行委員會 (National Language Promotion Committee). 常用國字標準字體筆順手册 (Handbook of the Stroke Orders of the Commonly-Used National Chinese Characters). Ministry of Education . 1996 . 978-9-57-090664-6. Taipei. zh.
  6. (Lecture notes of the subject "Modern Chinese Characters and Information Technology", Dept of Chinese and Bilingual Studies, Hong Kong Polytechnical University, by Dr. Zhang Xiaoheng, June 12, 2017.)
  7. http://www.moe.edu.cn/publicfiles/business/htmlfiles/moe/s230/201001/75615.html 现代汉语常用字表
  8. Book: Xing, Hongbing 邢红兵 . zh:现代汉字特征分析与计算研究 . Characteristic Analysis and Computational Research on Modern Chinese Characters. 商务印书馆 (The Commercial Press, Shangwu) . 2007 . 7-100-05310-2 . Beijing . zh. 20–21.
  9. http://www.moe.edu.cn/publicfiles/business/htmlfiles/moe/s230/201001/75616.html 现代汉语通用字表
  10. Book: Fu, Yonghe 傅永和 . zh:中文信息处理 . Chinese Information Processing . 广东教育出版社 (Guangdong Education Press) . 1999 . 9-787540-640804 . 3rd . Guangzhou . zh.
  11. https://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U4E00.pdf
  12. Book: GB13000.1字符集汉字字序(笔画序)规范 (Standard of GB13000.1 Character Set Chinese Character Order (Stroke-Based Order)). National Language Commission of China . October 1, 1999. Shanghai Education Press . zh. 7-5320-6674-6.
  13. Fei . Jinchang. (費錦昌) . 1997 . 現代漢字筆劃規範芻議 . 世界漢語教學 . (1997) . 2.
    • Book: Wang, Ning (王寧,鄒曉麗) . 工具書 (Reference Books). 和平圖書有限公司. 2003 . 962-238-363-7 . Hong Kong. zh. 24.
  14. Book: Zhang, Xiaoheng (张小衡) . . Li . Xiaotong (李笑通) . et al . 一二三笔顺检字手册 (Handbook of the YES Sorting Method). 语文出版社 (The Language Press) . 2013 . 978-7-80241-670-3 . Beijing . zh.