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3SFM Practical Cursive Chinese

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Lesson 1.1: How to Write “人”


大块头

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image.png.396347917ba8b5ad65a5848a167258de.png

 

vocabulary

  • 捺 = na4 = right-falling character stroke
  • 凌乱 = ling2 luan4 = disorderly
  • 弧线 = hu2 xian4 = arc
  • 收笔 = shou1 bi3 = to finish (a stroke of the pen)
  • 撇 = pie3 = left-falling character stroke
  • 沿用 = yan4 yong4 = to continue to use (an old method)

 

举一反三

image.thumb.png.88d79eaead32287428390b04644bf7e1.png

大,天,太,犬,合,会,命,队,众,过,建,文

 

摹帖:伪币

image.thumb.png.41c0dd64ecb188fd9c1afc5cc94d4223.png

 

跑堂的:“你给我的小费是一枚伪币。”

顾客:“是你找钱时给我的呀!”

跑堂的:“你明明知道我不想要它。干嘛偏要给我呢?”

 

作业

 

image.png

9 Comments


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陳德聰

Posted

跑堂的 :)

roddy

Posted

What's happening in the 作业 section? Is that you having three attempts and a teacher choosing the best, or...?

 

Cool new blog, looking forward to it. 

大块头

Posted

7 hours ago, 陳德聰 said:

跑堂的 :)

 

Thank you, I'll update the post.

 

5 hours ago, roddy said:

What's happening in the 作业 section? Is that you having three attempts and a teacher choosing the best, or...?

 

In these problems, the book supplies a 楷书 then three possible 行书 written variants. You are to select the 行书 variant that best matches the writing rules and examples previously given.

imron

Posted

I'd forgotten about all the jokes :mrgreen:

 

imron

Posted

跑堂的:“你明了知道我不想要它。干嘛偏要给我呢?”

This should be 明明.

 

I know you're thinking that second squiggle doesn't look anything like 明 and you're right.  That squiggle means 'duplicate of the previous character'.

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Shelley

Posted

On 1/29/2020 at 4:04 AM, imron said:

That squiggle means 'duplicate of the previous character'.

 

I have never seen this before (I know that means nothing, there is a lot I don't know) but is it only used in this type of "school work"? or should I have encountered it in the wild by now?

 

 

889

Posted

Occasionally you'll see it used, after more complex characters especially. Thus 谢 or 谢々. It's largely a handwriting convention. 明我的心。

 

  • Thanks 1
imron

Posted

I agree with 889 that's it's mostly a handwriting convention (much like " is used underneath English sentences to indicate a repeat of the word above).

 

4 hours ago, Shelley said:

but is it only used in this type of "school work"? or should I have encountered it in the wild by now?

If you've encountered lots of handwriting then I would have expected that you'd have encountered it in the wild.  If you hadn't, then I wouldn't have expected you to have seen it.

889

Posted

If you've taken any formal classes, the teacher would probably have used it on the blackboard at some point.

 

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