Writing • Stroke Types
Chinese Strokes — Part 3
Stroke Count & Dictionary Lookup
Chinese dictionaries are traditionally ordered by stroke count — knowing how many strokes a character has lets you look it up even when you have no idea how it is pronounced. This page explains how to count strokes correctly and gives you a reference table for common characters.
Why Stroke Count Matters
Dictionary lookup
Traditional printed Chinese dictionaries are indexed first by radical, then by stroke count. If you can count the strokes of a character's radical and the remaining strokes, you can find any character — even without knowing its pronunciation.
Input methods
Some Chinese input methods (especially on older devices and in Taiwan) use stroke count or stroke type as the input. Knowing whether a stroke is 横, 竖, 撇, 捺, or 折 lets you type characters this way.
Learning progression
Characters are often taught by stroke count — simpler characters first. Knowing the stroke count helps you understand where a character sits in the learning sequence.
Verification
When writing a character you are unsure about, counting your strokes and comparing to the expected count tells you immediately if you have forgotten or added a stroke.
How to Count Strokes Correctly
Each basic stroke = 1
横, 竖, 撇, 捺, 点, 提 — each counts as exactly one stroke, regardless of length.
Example: 一 (one horizontal stroke) = 1 stroke total
Each compound stroke = 1
横折, 竖弯钩, 横折钩 and all other compound strokes count as a single stroke, even though they change direction.
Example: 口 has 3 strokes: 横折 (top+right side), 横 (inner), 横 (bottom seal)
Do not count component parts separately
Count the actual strokes you write, not the number of sub-components a character is made from.
Example: 人 = 2 strokes (1 piě + 1 nà). Not 1 stroke, even though it is a simple shape.
Verify with a dictionary when unsure
Some characters look like they have more or fewer strokes than expected. Always verify complex characters with a stroke-order dictionary.
Example: 必 (bì) = 5 strokes. Students often miscount as 4 or 6.
Stroke Count Reference Table
Common characters grouped by stroke count, from simplest (1 stroke) to more complex (12 strokes). Use this as a quick reference or as a self-test — cover the pinyin column and see if you can identify each character.
Using a Radical + Stroke Count Dictionary
Traditional Chinese dictionaries (and many modern ones) use a two-step lookup method: first identify the character's radical, then count the remaining strokes outside the radical. Here is how to do it:
Identify the radical
Find the main radical component of the character. Radicals are usually the most semantically meaningful part — 水 (water) in 河 (river), 木 (tree) in 树 (tree), 口 (mouth) in 吃 (eat).
Look up the radical by stroke count
In the radical index at the front of the dictionary, find your radical under its stroke count. 水 = 4 strokes, 木 = 4 strokes, 口 = 3 strokes.
Count remaining strokes
Count only the strokes outside of (or not part of) the radical. These remaining strokes tell you where in the radical's section your character sits.
Find your character
Go to the radical's page and find the subgroup matching your remaining stroke count. Your character should be there.
Practical tip: In the modern age, the easiest way to look up a character you do not know is to draw it using the handwriting input on your phone or tablet. Most Chinese keyboard apps (including Pinyin keyboards with handwriting mode) will recognise the character from your drawn strokes. Use the traditional stroke-count method to understand how printed dictionaries work — it is a valuable literacy skill.