Guo's pronunciation

Chi is pronounced ch and.

1 and Guo's radical:

Insect system

2. Guo's strokes and stroke order:

*** 16 painting, the stroke order is: ボフブノブフフ.

3. Chinese interpretation of Chinese characters:

(1) A dragon without horns in ancient legends. Its shape is often used as decoration on ancient buildings, utensils and handicrafts: the head of a cockroach.

(2) ancient with "huan", enchanting.

4. Dictionary interpretation of the word "Guo"

Animals in ancient legends of China. It looks like a dragon without horns.

"Shuo Wen Jie Zi Insect Department": If the dragon is yellow, the land in the north is called cockroach ... or the cloud has no horns.

"Songs of Chu, Nine Songs of Qu Yuan, Hebo": Take a waterwheel to cover the lotus and drive away the two dragons.

5. The word "Guo":

Pool amount (ch Θ), pool plate (ch Θ pá n), bear pool (xióng chī Θ), Lingchi (líng chī Θ), Ji ā o ch Θ (j Θ n ch Θ) and pool boundary (ch Θ ji Θ).

Idioms and examples about Chinese characters;

(1) China idiom:

Charm: late: children are "late", an ancient legend of Zhongshan Ze's ghost. Metaphor for all kinds of bad guys.

Buckling plate: describes the appearance of buckling and winding. This is a line from Li Shen's Snake Meets Shaolin Temple in the Tang Dynasty.

The tiger is sitting on the dragon plate. From the Book of Dharma to the Record.

(2) Examples of the word "Guo":

1. There is no inscription on the tablet. There is a dragon in the middle of the front of the monument, four on the left and four on the right, and nine dragons in the * *, so it is also called "Kowloon"

Monument. "

2, fly like a fly, fly like a fly, dive in the water.

3, cold shock black magpie from the nest noise, cold shooting dumplings for caves,

4. In the Han Dynasty, the upper part of the jade seal was gyro-shaped, and the seal buttons were mostly bucket-shaped, but there were also a few bridge buttons or tiger buttons.