The stroke order of the word "di"

The stroke order of the word "di" is as follows:

1. Stroke order

The number of strokes in the word "di" is 11 strokes, the pinyin is dí, the radical is bamboo, and the structure is The upper and lower structure, the stroke order is ノ一丨ノ一丨フ一丨一, and the stroke names are left, horizontal, dot, left, horizontal, dot, vertical, horizontal fold, horizontal, vertical, horizontal.

2. Expand knowledge

1. Flute

The flute is the oldest Han musical instrument discovered so far, and it is also the most representative and most popular among the Han musical instruments. Wind instruments with national characteristics. One of the horizontally blown woodwind instruments commonly used in traditional Chinese music, the Chinese bamboo flute is generally divided into the southern tune flute, the northern bang flute and the alto flute in between. The vocal range can generally reach two octaves and two more.

The flute is often used in Chinese folk music, Chinese folk orchestras, Western symphony orchestras and modern music. It is one of the representative instruments of Chinese music. In the national band, the flute is an important wind instrument and is regarded as the representative of national wind music. Most flutes are made of bamboo, but there are also flutes made of stone, jade and mahogany. In ancient times, there were also bone flutes. However, the best raw material for making flutes is still bamboo, because bamboo flutes have better sound effects and lower production costs.

2. The history of the flute

The Chinese flute has a long history, which can be traced back to the Neolithic Age. At that time, our ancestors lit bonfires, set up prey, and ate and danced around the captured prey. They also drilled holes in the tibias of birds and blew them (using their sounds to trap prey and transmit signals). This was how the oldest unearthed game in my country was born. Musical instrument - bone flute.

The flute was called "篴" in ancient times. In the Han Dynasty, Xu Shen's "Shuowen Jiezi" recorded: "Flute, seven holes, bamboo bamboo raft".

Both the "Da Hengchui Department" and the "Small Hengchui Department" of drum music in the Sui and Tang Dynasties used horizontal flutes. Among the "Yan music" types of music in the Sui and Tang Dynasties for people to enjoy and entertain, the horizontal flute (called Hengliu at that time) was widely active in the orchestra. The horizontal flute can also be seen in the Dunhuang murals of the Sui Dynasty and the pictures of Tang opera musicians. Play. In other historical pictures we also find flute-playing postures in both directions.

In the Tang Dynasty, there have been records about famous flute players such as Qing Qing, such as Li Mo, Sun Chuxiu, You Chengen, Yun Zhaoxia, etc. Among them, Li Mo once studied with musicians from Qiuci in the Western Regions. Because of his extraordinary flute playing, his skills were outstanding. During the Kaiyuan period, he was known as "the best in the world" in terms of flute playing ability.

There are various flute systems in the Song Dynasty, including the cross-hand flute, the dragon-neck flute, the small horizontal flute with eleven holes, the large horizontal flute with nine holes, the jade flute with seven holes, etc. With the rise of Song Ci and Yuan operas, opera flourished , the flute has become an accompaniment instrument for many types of operas, and is divided into two categories according to the types of accompaniment: bangdi and qudi. In folk opera bands, the flute is also an indispensable instrument.