Fortune Telling Collection - Free divination - Cai caoshu

Cai caoshu

Cai's cursive script is shown in the following figure:

Cai: The total number of strokes: 14 paintings.

Basic meaning:

1 weeds.

(2) The names of Zhou Dynasty governors in China are in Shangcai County and Xincai County of Henan Province today.

(3) Tortoise for divination: Tortoise ~.

(4) Kill, minus: "300 Li 1, 200 Li ~".

⑤ Last name.

Last name source:

1, from the surname, is a descendant of the Yellow Emperor. ?

2. Descendants from Ji's surname.

Extended data:

Cursive script can be divided into broad sense and narrow sense. Broadly speaking, regardless of the times, all scribbled words can be regarded as cursive. In a narrow sense, that is, as a specific font. Formed in the Han Dynasty, it evolved on the basis of official script for the convenience of writing. It is characterized by simple structure and continuous strokes.

The cursive script is divided into Cao Zhang and today's grass, and today's grass is divided into big grass (also called crazy grass) and small grass, which feels beautiful in madness.

Cao Zhang's brush strokes are very simple, connected by twisted ribbons, similar to today's grass. However, its structure is straight, its brushwork is blunt, and there are waves in the strokes, especially at the beginning and end of the painting, which obviously retains the brushwork of the official script, and its words are independent, intermittent and orderly, which is obviously different from grass and weeds.

This kind of grass, commonly called cursive script, is based on Cao Zhang and regular script. It is made by removing the traces of official script left by Cao Zhang, speeding up the writing, and adding a hook. Zhang Huaiguan's "Broken Book" said: "The book of Cao Zhang has different characters, and Zhang Zhi has turned it into a modern grass, increasing its flow rate, plucking its hair, linking it up and down, or borrowing the suffix as the next prefix, which is odd-shaped, and has both numbers and meanings." This is a summary of the different postures and brushwork of Cao Zhang and Cao Jin, such as Cui Yuan's "Fairy Post".

Weeds was founded in the Tang Dynasty, and Zhang Xu was the founder of Weeds, so he was called "the sage of grass". Huai Su, a later monk, was also a master of weeds. Weeds are simpler and faster than today's grass, and their brushwork is more continuous and tortuous, lively and flying, and they are unrestrained and have the potential to gallop thousands of miles. The ancients said that its shape was "folded and hugged, swayed and hung, neat and tidy, uneven, held high in the shade, or worn selectively." It's really "various, endless, not surprising." The author can use it to express his bold and exciting feelings, or to express his ambition, or to dispel the stagnant mood. However, because it omits many strokes, and the shape is too different from letters and lines, it is difficult to identify.

References:

Baidu Chinese: Cai, Baidu Encyclopedia: cursive script