Language · 语言 yǔyán

笔画

bǐ huà

Chinese characters are built from a small repertoire of standard strokes. Every line in every character is one of these stroke types, written in a prescribed order that shapes both the final appearance and the rhythm of handwriting.

什么是笔画shénme shì bǐhuàWhat Strokes Are — The Atomic Units
定义 dìngyì · Definition

A stroke (笔画 bǐhuà) is a single continuous mark made without lifting the brush or pen. It begins where the instrument touches the surface and ends where it lifts. The number of times you lift the pen equals the number of strokes in the character.

笔画 literally means "brush mark" — 笔 (brush, pen) + 画 (to draw, mark, stroke). The word applies equally to brush calligraphy and ballpoint pen writing; the stroke repertoire is the same.

Chinese has a relatively small set of stroke types — around 30 named variants in strict calligraphic analysis, but reducible to 8 fundamental shapes that cover all characters. Every component, every radical, every full character is assembled from these same building blocks. Knowing the strokes means you can reproduce any character you've seen, even one you've never written before.

八种基本笔画bā zhǒng jīběn bǐhuàThe Eight Basic Strokes — 永字八法
永字八法 yǒng zì bā fǎ · The Eight Methods of 永

The classical mnemonic for the eight strokes is the character 永 yǒng (eternity, permanence) — it contains all eight fundamental stroke types in a single character, making it the traditional practice character for beginning calligraphers.

横 ー
héng
horizontal stroke — left to right
The most basic stroke. Runs left to right, slightly rising in brush calligraphy. Found in virtually every character: 一, 三, , .
竖 |
shù
vertical stroke — top to bottom
Straight down. Can end with a hanging point (悬针竖) or a rounded base (垂露竖). Found in: , 十, , .
撇 ノ
piě
left-falling stroke — top-right to bottom-left
Sweeps from upper right to lower left. One of the most visually distinctive strokes. Found in: , 入, , .
捺 \
right-falling stroke — top-left to bottom-right, with a "wave"
Sweeps from upper left to lower right, with a characteristic pressure swell and lifting flick at the end. Found in: , , , .
点 ·
diǎn
dot — a short angled mark
Not a true dot but a short angled stroke. Direction varies: can fall left or right. Found in: , 六, , . Water radical 氵is three dots.
折 ∟
zhé
turning stroke — changes direction mid-stroke
A stroke that turns without lifting: horizontal then vertical (横折), vertical then horizontal (竖折), etc. Many compound strokes are classified as variants of 折. Found in: , , , 马.
钩 J
gōu
hook — ends with a small kick or flick
A stroke ending with a quick lift that produces a small pointed hook. Variants: 竖钩 (vertical hook), 横钩 (horizontal hook), 弯钩 (curved hook). Found in: 子, 小, , 我.
提 ↗
rising stroke — short, rising left-to-right
A short stroke that rises from lower-left to upper-right. Seen in the base of , , and in the leftward radical form of certain components. Less common than the others but unmistakable in calligraphy.
笔顺bǐ shùnStroke Order — The Rules
笔顺规则 bǐshùn guīzé · Stroke Order Rules

Stroke order (笔顺 bǐshùn) is the prescribed sequence for writing a character's strokes. It is not arbitrary — stroke order developed over two millennia of brushwork to produce the most efficient and aesthetically balanced result. The basic rules:

Top before bottom. Write upper components before lower ones: 三 is written top-line, middle-line, bottom-line.

Left before right. Write left components before right ones: (bright) — write (left) then (right).

Horizontal before vertical when strokes cross: write 十 as horizontal first, then vertical.

Enclosures: frame first, contents second, close last. — write the outer frame (three sides), fill the interior 玉, then close the bottom. The closing stroke comes last so the interior is not trapped.

Center before sides in vertically symmetric characters: 小 is written center vertical stroke first, then left dot, then right dot.

Left-falling before right-falling when both appear: — write 撇 (left-falling) first, then 捺 (right-falling).

笔画数bǐhuà shùStroke Count — Why Numbers Matter
字典用途 zìdiǎn yòngtú · Dictionary Uses

Stroke count is used in two main ways. First, within a radical section of a traditional dictionary, characters are ordered by the stroke count of their non-radical components. To find 清 (clear): identify radical 氵(3 strokes), subtract from total 11 strokes, look under 8-stroke entries in the water section.

Second, stroke-count indexes (笔画索引) in dictionaries allow lookup by total stroke count when the radical is unclear — a backup method when you cannot identify which part of a character is the radical.

Common stroke counts for reference: 一 = 1 stroke. = 2. = 3. = 4. = 5. = 6. 我 = 7. = 8. 南 = 9. = 10. Characters above 25 strokes are rare in everyday use. The most stroke-heavy common character is 龘 (dragons walking together) at 48 strokes — an extreme outlier found in classical texts.

数字时代shùzì shídàiStrokes in the Digital Age — Input Methods
输入法 shūrùfǎ · Input Methods

Most Chinese smartphone and computer users type using pinyin input (typing the romanization and selecting from a list) or voice input. Stroke-based input remains an option, particularly for users who know a character's pronunciation but not its spelling, or for users entering characters on small screens where handwriting recognition works well.

The 五笔输入法 (Wǔbǐ, "five-stroke input") is a professional input method that maps every character to a sequence of stroke-group codes typed on a standard keyboard — extremely fast for experienced users but requiring memorization of a full coding table. It was dominant in Chinese offices through the 1990s and early 2000s before pinyin input improved.

Handwriting recognition on modern devices (手写输入 shǒuxiě shūrù) has become accurate enough that stroke order is less critical for input than it once was — the algorithm can usually identify a character even if strokes are written out of order. But correct stroke order still matters for calligraphy, for fast handwriting, and as a cultural competence signal.

核心词汇héxīn cíhuìKey Vocabulary
笔画
bǐhuà
stroke · stroke count
笔 (brush/pen) + 画 (mark). Both the individual stroke type and, in context, the total number of strokes in a character.
笔顺
bǐshùn
stroke order
笔 (pen) + 顺 (in sequence, correct order). The prescribed sequence for writing a character's strokes.
书写
shūxiě
to write · handwriting
(writing, book) + 写 (to write). The general term for writing by hand, as opposed to typing.
永字八法
yǒng zì bā fǎ
the Eight Methods of 永
The classical mnemonic: the character 永 (eternity) contains all eight fundamental stroke types, making it the traditional first practice character in calligraphy.
毛笔
máobǐ
brush (for calligraphy)
毛 (hair, fur) + 笔 (writing instrument). The traditional brush made from animal hair. Distinct from 钢笔 (fountain pen), 铅笔 (pencil), 圆珠笔 (ballpoint).