There were a total of 12 strokes of the military character.
The Chinese character for Jun had four strokes: ``` ```
This word is, and it has nine strokes.
The word with the most number of cangue in the world is the word "Cang". It has 11 pictures. This character was made up of two parts, namely "Cang" and "cun". When the two Chinese characters were combined, it was the word "Cang".
The word with the most strokes in the world is "p". It has 11 strokes. This character was made up of two identical " one " characters, each with four strokes. Therefore, there were a total of 11 strokes of the character.
The Chinese character with the most strokes in Chinese characters was "", which had 10 strokes. Its name came from the fact that it was made up of two "water" characters and each "water" character contained seven strokes. Therefore, the word "San" had a total of 10 strokes.
The Chinese character with the most number of strokes is 'Feng', which has 11 strokes. The word " Feng " was composed of four parts: " Zhu "," Pi "," Bei ", and " Zhu ", which represented " pig "," metal "," fish ", and " pig " respectively. There were many characters for 'Feng',' Liguo','Feng', and' Zhu'. Other than 'Feng', there were also' Zhu','','' and many other Chinese characters with the same or different homonyms. They were written in many ways due to their different shapes, origins, and uses.
The word with the most number of cangue in the world is "Feng". It has 12 strokes. The word " Feng " was composed of two " one " characters, each occupying two positions, so there were a total of 20 strokes.
The word with the most strokes in China was " Amorphophallus ". It had 11 strokes. The word was composed of two parts, namely "Piper" and "Piper", which had five strokes and six strokes respectively. These two words were often misused in 'Dream of the Red Chamber', and were thought to be the same word.
The Kangxi dictionary had 10 strokes for the military character.
The most common Chinese character is 'Feng', which has 10 strokes. This word appeared in Shuo Wen Jie Zi as a term that represented something that was ten feet long.