Eight Principles of Yong
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The Eight Principles of Yong (Chinese: 永字八法; pinyin: Yǒngzì Bā Fǎ; Japanese: 永字八法/えいじはっぽう, eiji happō; Korean: 영자팔법, Yeongjapalbeop; Vietnamese: Vĩnh Tự Bát Pháp/Tám Phương Pháp viết Chữ Vĩnh) explain how to write eight common strokes in regular script which are found all in the one character, 永 (pinyin: yǒng, "forever", "permanence"). It was traditionally believed that the frequent practice of these principles as a beginning calligrapher could ensure beauty in one's writing.
The Eight Principles are influenced by the earlier Seven Powers (七勢) by Lady Wei Shuo (衛鑠) of Eastern Jin. Publications on the Principles include:
- The Praise to the Eight Principles of "Yong" (永字八法頌) by Liu Zongyuan (柳宗元) of the Tang Dynasty.
- Explanations to the Eight Principles of "Yong" (永字八法解) by Li Puguang (李溥光) of the Yuan Dynasty. Lǐ provided two-character metaphorical names.
Table of naming usages
Stroke | Name[citation needed] (pinyin, trad./simp.) |
CJK stroke name | Lǐ's name | Additional description | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | ![]() |
Cè, (側/侧) "Sideway" | Diǎn, (點/点) "Dot" | Guài Shí, (怪石) "Strange stone" | Tiny dash, speck. |
2 | ![]() |
Lè, (勒) "Bridle" | Héng, (橫) "Horizontal" | Yù Àn, (玉案) "Jade table" | Rightward stroke. |
3 | ![]() |
Nǔ, (弩), "Crossbow"; Nǔ, (努) "Strive" |
Shù, (竪 "Erect"; Tiěchǔ, (鐵杵/铁杵) "Iron staff"[citation needed] |
Tiězhù, (鐵柱/铁柱) "Iron pillar" | Downward stroke. |
4 | ![]() |
Tí, (趯) "Jump" | Gōu, (鉤) "Hook" | Xièzhuǎ, (蟹爪) "Pincer of a crab" | Appended to other strokes, suddenly going down or going left only. |
5 | ![]() |
Cè, (策) "Horsewhip" | Tí, (提) "Raise"; Tiāo, (挑) "Lifting off"[citation needed] |
Hǔyá, (虎牙) "Tiger's tooth" | Flick up and rightwards. |
6 | ![]() |
Lüè, (掠) "Passing lightly" | Wān, (彎/弯) "Bend, curve" | Xījiǎo, (犀角) "Horn of rhinoceros" | A tapering thinning curve, usually concave left (convex outward right) and with fast speed as if skimming. |
7 | ![]() |
Zhuó, (啄) "Pecking" | Piě, (撇) "Throw away, slant"; Duǎn Piě (短撇) "Short slant"[citation needed] |
Niǎo Zhuó, (鳥啄)/(鸟啄) "Bird pecking" | Falling leftwards (with slight curve). |
8 | ![]() |
Zhé, (磔) "Dismemberment" | Nà, (捺) "Pressing forcefully"; Pō, (波) "Wave"[citation needed] |
Jīndāo, (金刀) "Golden dao (knife)" | Falling rightwards (fattening at the bottom), where the end point is "as sharp as a knife" (hence the name "Dismemberment"). |
Note: - Xié 斜 is sometimes added to the 永's strokes. It is a concave Shù falling right, always ended by a Gōu, visible on this image.
CJK strokes
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In addition to these eight common strokes in 永, there are at least two dozen strokes of combinations which enter in the composition of CJK strokes and by inclusion the CJK characters themselves.
See also
References
- Explanations to the Eight Principles of "Yong" (永字八法解) by Li Puguang (李溥光)
- Unicode page for all CJK strokes, thus including the 8 strokes of Yongde:Chinesische Kalligrafie