Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - How do you write gold, wood, water, fire and earth?

How do you write gold, wood, water, fire and earth?

Wood, water, fire, earth ? Oracle script writing (the writing of gold characters is not available at the moment):

Jin, wood, water, fire, earth ? Jin script (Big Seal Script) writing:

Jin, Mu, Water, Fire, Earth ? Small Seal Script:

金、木、水、火、土 ? Clerical Script:

金、木、水、火、土? Regular Script Writing Style:

Jin, Wood, Water, Fire, Earth ? Cursive writing style:

Jin, Wood, Water, Fire, Earth? Running script writing:

Calligraphy fonts, that is, the classification of calligraphy style. Calligraphy fonts, traditionally speaking *** there are five kinds of running script fonts, cursive script fonts, clerical script fonts, seal script fonts and regular script fonts, that is, five major categories. In each major category is subdivided into a number of small categories, such as seal script and divided into big seal script, small seal script, regular script and the division of Wei Bei, Tang Kai, and cursive script and Zhang Cao, grass, grass, wild cursive points.

Seal Script, Official Script, Swallow Script, Regular Script, Cursive Script, Song Script, and so on are collections of many fonts of a certain type of similar style (also known as "styles of writing"), rather than a single font. Two calligraphers write out the regular script can be called two fonts; Song font in the computer there are in the easy Song and the new fine Ming style fonts.

Extended information:

Origin of Calligraphy

The art of calligraphy in China began with the creation of Chinese characters. The first works of the art of calligraphy were not words, but rather some pictorial symbols - hieroglyphics or pictograms. The symbols of the Chinese characters, first appearing on pottery, have no precise meaning.

More than 8,000 years ago, handmade ceramics unearthed at Fili Gang contained a relatively large number of character-like symbols, which were not recognizable as Chinese characters, but were the beginnings of Chinese characters. Immediately following the Yangshao culture, about six thousand years ago, the Half-slope site took the development of Chinese writing one step further. This can be considered the origin of Chinese writing.

Then came the Erlitou and Erligang cultures. Archaeological excavations of the Erlitou culture have found characters similar to the Yinxu oracle bone inscriptions, all of which are single, independent characters. The Erligang culture has been found to have a writing system. This made another big step forward for civilization.

The origin of primitive writing was an imitative instinct, used to visualize something concrete. This simple writing can therefore be called prehistoric calligraphy.

Baidu Encyclopedia - Fonts