I’m trying to learn chinese on duolingo, and as I’m learning characters I try to write them down with the correct stroke order to help me memorize them.

I read the wikipedia article on stroke order, but there seems to be tons of exceptions and counter-intuitive stuff like the eighth stroke of “很” coming before the ninth stroke it connects to, or the order of strokes in the first radical of “忙” or whether or not “minor strokes” (丶) actually go last, etc.

Is there anyway to get better at telling what the stroke orders are, or do I just have to look it up for each character? Does it matter that much if I deviate from the standard stroke order as long as I follow the correct rules?

I’m not trying to be a calligrapher, I just want to be able to write legibly and remember what the characters are.

  • Fleewithme [none/use name]
    ·
    3 years ago

    Radicals are an obsolete concept. They belong in the garbage can. Since we don't use paper dictionaries to look up characters any more, the entire idea of "radical" is deprecated.

    • Kumikommunism [they/them]
      ·
      3 years ago

      After seeing this comment on top of your other reply to my comment, I still can't tell if you're serious. This just gets better.

      • Fleewithme [none/use name]
        ·
        3 years ago

        What gets better? "Radicals" were invented as a way to look up Chinese characters in a paper dictionary. Since we don't use those any more, the entire concept of "radicals" is obsolete and was discarded a decade or more ago.