Learn to Read and Write Chinese: An Introduction

Characters

Chinese writing system is different from that of the European languages. The words for European languages are composed by letters while Chinese words are composed by characters.
 

ri
sun
yue
moon
shan
hill
shui
water
huo
fire
tu
soil
ren
person
kou
mouth

Each character is an independent writing unit which is meaningful and it is composed by strokes.

Strokes

A character needs to be written stroke by stroke. A stroke is a one-time movement of your pen on the paper. When your pen touches paper, that begins a stroke. When your pen leaves paper, that ends a stroke.

There are some basic strokes with variations. The examples are as follows:
 

dots
horizontal
vertical
left falling
right falling
hooks
turns

 

Stroke Order

There are rules of writing characters. Stroke order must be followed. The basic rules are:

1. Horizontal first, then vertical, e.g.

2. Left falling first, then right falling, e.g

3. Top first, then bottom, e.g.

4. Left first, then right, e.g.


5. Outside first, then inside, e.g.


6. Outside first, then inside. Close finally. e.g.

7. Central first, then both sides, e.g.


 

Components and Radicals

Some characters are simple and indepent, some complex or compound ones consist of several components.

Simple:
 

wo
I, me
kou
mouth
zi
child

female
li
strength

Compound:
 

ni
you
ming
bright

a surname
he
river
dao
to arrive

One way to search a character in dictionaries is to use radical index. Radicals are components of characters. Characters sharing the same component are classified in the same category. The components used to index characters are called radicals. The number of radicals in Chinese vary from dictionary to dictionary. But there are 240 commonly used radicals. More detailed knowledge about radicals and methods of searching characters will be introduced later. Click here to see some radicals and how to write.