- 亁 meaning[3] in English
Variant Of 乾[Qian2].
Main Components
By analyzing its shape, the hanzi[2] character 亁 can be seen as a composition of 4 main shapes where their meanings are ten (十) , abbr. for 日本[Ri4 … (日) , old variant of … (干) , and to beg (乞)
Its radical[1] is: 乙 (yi3) which means: Second Of The Ten Heavenly Stems 十天干[Shi2 Tian1 Gan1], Second In Order, Letter 'B' Or Roman 'Ii' In List 'A, B, C', Or 'I, Ii, Iii' Etc, Second Party (In Legal Contract, Usually 乙方[Yi3 Fang1], As Opposed To 甲方[Jia3 Fang1]), Ethyl, Bent, Winding, Radical In Chinese Characters (Kangxi Radical 5), Ancient Chinese Compass Point: 105°, .乙
In cangjie it is written with JJON
How to write 亁
To write亁 you should write a combination of 十 日 干 , 乞 arranged in a 吅 shape:
十 + 日 + 干 + 乞 = 亁
亁 Stroke Order
The order of the strokes to write 亁 should be followed in this specific way.
The composition tree, or the characters that form each component of 亁, looks as follow:
亁Pinyin:gan1 Shape:吅
Meaning[3]: Variant Of 乾[Qian2]
日Pinyin:ri4
Meaning[3]: Abbr. For 日本[Ri4 Ben3], Japan
干Pinyin:gan4
Meaning[3]: Old Variant Of 乾|干[Gan1]
一Pinyin:yi1
Meaning[3]: One . 1 . Single . A (Article) . As Soon As . Entire . Whole . All . Throughout . 'One' Radical In Chinese Characters (Kangxi Radical 1) . Also Pr. [Yao1] For Greater Clarity When Spelling Out Numbers Digit By Digit
乞Pinyin:qi3 Shape:吕
𠂉Pinyin:𠂉5 Shape:+
丿Pinyin:pie3
Meaning[3]: Radical In Chinese Characters (Kangxi Radical 4) . See 撇[Pie3]
一Pinyin:yi1
Meaning[3]: One . 1 . Single . A (Article) . As Soon As . Entire . Whole . All . Throughout . 'One' Radical In Chinese Characters (Kangxi Radical 1) . Also Pr. [Yao1] For Greater Clarity When Spelling Out Numbers Digit By Digit
乙Pinyin:yi3
Meaning[3]: Second Of The Ten Heavenly Stems 十天干[Shi2 Tian1 Gan1] . Second In Order . Letter 'B' Or Roman 'Ii' In List 'A, B, C', Or 'I, Ii, Iii' Etc . Second Party (In Legal Contract, Usually 乙方[Yi3 Fang1], As Opposed To 甲方[Jia3 Fang1]) . Ethyl . Bent . Winding . Radical In Chinese Characters (Kangxi Radical 5) . Ancient Chinese Compass Point: 105°