PART í Radicals and Components Chapter 1, Learning Strokes [ill] (Kaku)_______________ When learning Kanji, a solid knowledge of radicals is useful in analyzing and understanding the composition of Kanji characters. However, before you begin learning the radicals that comprise Kanji, it is important to spend some time learning about the smallest unit of a radical (and therefore of an entire character): the stroke. You will become familiar with the different types of strokes, in what order they are written, and how to count the number of strokes in a radical or a character. Types of Strokes [— ii/] (Ikkaku) Strokes can be categorized into eight major groups. These include ten (the abbreviated stroke), yoko sen (the horizontal line), täte sen (the vertical line), naname sen (the diagonal line), kado kagi (the corner), naname kagi (the sharp angle), magari (the curve), and ahiru [ahiru = duck] (the sharp angle-and-curve combination). There are variations of these categories which depend upon how the stroke is ended. As shown below, there are four ways to end a stroke. Stroke Endings: The stop, indicated by a period (•), requires bringing the pen to a complete stop and then lifting it off the paper. The jump, indicated by a check, ( v) requires quickly flicking the pen off the paper. J 1 L V -' 7^2- ■ PART 1 The sweep, indicated by a dotted line with an arrow head ( j ), requires gradually sweeping the pen off the paper in a continuous motion. * •/ The final method, the stop-sweep, indicated by the stop sign (a period) followed by a dotted line (••••), requires the pen to come to a complete stop before lifting it off the paper in a sweeping motion diagonally down and to the right. V The Eight Major Stroke Categories: The eight major categories of strokes are shown below in example Kanji that demonstrate the stroke with its various endings. Be sure to pay careful attention to the stroke endings. 1. Abbreviated stroke (ten) JW\ y\^ TEN shita sora koori tori fuyu (dot) (underneath) (sky) (ice) (bird) (winter) 2. Horizontal line (yoko sen) As a rule, the horizontal line is always written from left to right (-*0. ICHI (one) Nl (two) SAN (three) KETSU (lack) o-kii (large) TEN (heaven, sky) 3. Vertical line (täte sen) As a rule, the vertical line is always written from top to bottom ( \ ). i: M Jľ • J • 1 1 / • ! JO (ten) kawa (river) CHÔ (one block) te (hand) naga-i (long) SHU (a state) 4. Diagonal line (naname sen) Diagonal lines that begin at the top can sweep downward to the left but those that go downward to the right end either with a stop-sweep or a jump. Those that begin at the bottom sweep upward to the right. ŕ u suku-nai (a few) •, -'s. y/\ A >^ kawa HON/moto DAI hito ashi (river) (book/base) (generation) (person) (foot) 5. Corner ikado kagi) -r 7 A "7 i- kuchi yama tsuki onna ona-ji KU (mouth) (mountain) (moon) (woman) (same) (ward) 6. Sharp angle (nanamekagi) -?i ko (child) 77 * -7 >& yo (evening) mizu (water) chikara (power) yumi (bow) KÖ (public) 7. Curve (magari) kokoro (heart) I. SHICHI (seven) U am (older brother) U U U ke (hair) iro (color) kita (north) 8. Sharp angle-and-curve combination (ahiru) a -& i -% OTSU KU (the second) (nine) kaze (wind) Kl (air) vT to-bu (fly) -r Kl (steam)