1. The Chinese character with the most strokes is not 9999. The Chinese character with the most strokes is a combination of "龘(dá)" and "?(duì)", with a total of 84 strokes.
This word is included in Japan’s TRON project. This character is a Japanese surname. It was found in the name information of Japan's "Life Insurance Company" and the telephone directory of Tokyo, but whether it is true or not has yet to be confirmed. This 84-stroke kanji was used as the name of a ramen shop in Matsudo City, Chiba Prefecture in June 2010, becoming an example of its use.
2. In terms of Chinese characters still in use, the word "Biáng" in the Shaanxi noodle dish "Biáng Biáng Noodles" has the most strokes, with a total of 56 strokes.
The formula for writing the word "Biáng": "One point lifts up to the sky, two bays of the Yellow River, eight characters open the mouth wide, words go in, you twist, I twist; you grow, I grow "There is a horse king in the middle, and there is a hook hanging next to the moon character at the bottom of the heart, and I am pushing a cart to go around Xianyang."
The Chinese character with the most strokes in the same code is also included in the traditional dictionary. There are two Chinese characters with the most strokes included: one is the character "?" (composed of four traditional Chinese characters for "dragon", pronounced zhé), with a total of 64 strokes, which are included in "Chinese Vocabulary Supplement" and "Chinese Dictionary".
The second Chinese character with the most strokes in Unicode (64 strokes), the other one also belongs to the 64 strokes and is the character "" (composed of four traditional Chinese characters for "Xing", pronounced zhèng), included in " "Chinese Dictionary", "Chinese Dictionary", etc.
In addition, the character "?" (composed of four "雷" characters, pronounced bèng) has 52 pictures, and the character "?" (composed of four traditional Chinese characters "cloud", pronounced nóng) has 48 pictures.
Extended information:
There are eight basic strokes of traditional Chinese characters, namely "dot (丶), horizontal (one), vertical (丨), left (丿), and 捺 ( 乀), fold (乛), bend (), hook (亅)", also known as the "Eight Methods of Yongzi". The "General Chinese Character Font Form for Printing" issued by the Ministry of Culture of the People's Republic of China and the Chinese Character Reform Commission on January 30, 1965, and the National Language and Character Working Committee, the Press and Publication Administration of the People's Republic of China and the State Press and Publication Administration in March 1988 The released "Modern Chinese Common Character List" stipulates five categories of basic strokes: horizontal, vertical, apostrophe, dot, and fold.
There are two types of Chinese character fonts: handwritten and printed. Script refers to the handwriting form of text. It is flexible and diverse and easy to express personal style. There are three main types of modern Chinese handwriting: regular script, cursive script, and running script. The pen shape of handwritten Chinese characters varies depending on the hard and soft pens used when writing. For example, the pen shape is vertical when written with a hard pen. It can also be divided into short vertical, long vertical, and hanging needle vertical when writing with a soft pen (such as a brush). and vertical dew and other pen shapes.
Print style refers to the printing form of text. There are four main types of modern Chinese character printing styles: Song style, imitation Song style, Kai style, and Hei type. Among them, Song style and Kai style are the most commonly used printing styles. Before the arrangement of Chinese character glyphs, the stroke shapes and gestures of printed Song style and printed regular style were quite different. For example, the "ji" in printed regular style was "?" and "卽" in printed Song style.