The strokes of the word rice: dot, left, horizontal, vertical, left and right.
Mi, a standard first-class character (commonly used character) in modern Chinese, is pronounced mǐ in Mandarin. It was first seen in the oracle bone inscriptions of the Shang Dynasty and is a pictographic character in the Six Books. The basic meaning of "meter" is the name of the seeds of cereals or other plants without the skin, such as rice; its extended meaning is the international unit of length, such as the meter ruler. In modern Chinese usage, "rice" is often used as a noun to describe a very small or very small amount. Just a little bit, like a grain of snow.
The word "rice" was first seen in oracle bone inscriptions in the Shang Dynasty, and was used in pictographic characters. Like a pile of rice grains. The original image has three points on the top and bottom of a horizontal line, and each point is like a grain of rice. Later, the two points in the upper and lower middle became long vertical ones, and then the two long vertical points were connected together to form a cross shape with the original horizontal one. After being converted into regular script, the two points on the left and right below became a stroke and a stroke respectively. The original meaning is the seeds of grain crops with the skins removed.
Idioms and sentences related to the word rice:
1. Idioms
Singing sand to make rice, blowing chaff to see rice, firewood and rice couple, firewood, rice, oil and salt, waiting for rice to be cooked , buckets of rice and rulers of cloth, flying rice turned into cud, chaff and rice, painted sand and gathered rice, simple silk threads of several meters, gathered rice to form a mountain.
2. Sentences
(1) Women are the most practical and cannot do without daily necessities. Women are the least practical, dreaming of flowers and wine.
(2) On Children’s Day, regain warm memories, put firewood, rice, oil and salt into the fairy tale house, forget all the unhappiness and boredom, give the remaining childlike innocence a holiday, and enjoy the massage of the soul.
(3) After the flowers and the moon, we started a life of daily necessities, rice, oil and salt. Love brings us into the fortress of love. No matter what they say, we can still live happily.
(4) Holding hands for half a century, raising children with daily necessities, loving each other through hardships and joys, and never regretting the bumps and tumbles.
(5) Love is not in front of flowers and under the moon, but in the time when we are in the same boat through thick and thin, between daily necessities and daily necessities.