Standard Form of National Characters
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The ''Standard Form of National Characters'' or the ''Standard Typefaces for Chinese Characters'' () is the
standardized Standardization or standardisation is the process of implementing and developing technical standards based on the consensus of different parties that include firms, users, interest groups, standards organizations and governments. Standardization ...
form of
Chinese characters Chinese characters () are logograms developed for the writing of Chinese. In addition, they have been adapted to write other East Asian languages, and remain a key component of the Japanese writing system where they are known as ''kanji ...
set by the Ministry of Education of the Republic of China (Taiwan).


Lists

There are three lists of the Standard Form of National Characters, promulgated by Taiwan's Ministry of Education: * Chart of Standard Forms of Common National Characters (), including 4,808 commonly used Chinese characters. * Chart of Standard Forms of Less-Than-Common National Characters (), including secondary commonly used 6,329 characters. * Chart of Rarely-Used National Characters (), including 18,319 rarely used characters.


Characteristics

''Note: Viewing this section correctly requires certain standard typefaces to be installed and the browser to be configured to use them in appropriate contexts.'' The Standard Form of National Characters tends to adopt orthodox variants for most of its characters, but it still adopts many common vulgar variants. Many have their components rearranged. For example: * The orthodox form of this character has 君 above 羊, i.e. 羣. * The orthodox form of this character has 山 above 夆, i.e. 峯. * The orthodox form of this character has 里 inside 衣, i.e. 裏. Other vulgar variants which are extremely common in handwriting have been adopted. For example: * The orthodox form of this character is with the second and fourth strokes pointing out. * The orthodox form of this character has 亼 above 卩, i.e. . Some forms which were standardized have never been used or are extremely rare. For example: * Before this standard was created, the second horizontal stroke was almost always the longest, i.e. . * Whenever there is a radical resembling or under other components, most standards write the first stroke as a vertical stroke, e.g. the Mainland Chinese standard writes these characters as . Some components are differentiated where most other standards do not differentiate. For example: * The radical on the left in 朠 is (meaning "moon"), while the radical on the left in 脈 is (a form of 肉, meaning "meat"). They are differentiated in that 月 has two horizontal strokes where ⺼ has two dots resembling . * The radical at the top of 草 is , while the radical at the top of 夢 is . They are differentiated in that the horizontal strokes of 卝 do not pass through the vertical strokes. * The radical on the left in 次 is , while the radical on the left in 冰 is . * The radical on the top in 冬 is , the radical on the right in 致 is , and the radical on the bottom right of 瓊 is . This standard tends to follow a rule of writing
regular script Regular script (; Hepburn: ''kaisho''), also called (), (''zhēnshū''), (''kǎitǐ'') and (''zhèngshū''), is the newest of the Chinese script styles (popularized from the Cao Wei dynasty c. 200 AD and maturing stylistically around th ...
where there should be no more than one of ㇏ (called ), long horizontal stroke, or hook to the right (e.g. ㇂ ㇃) in a character. * The first horizontal strokes in these characters are long horizontal strokes. Therefore, long dots are used in place of a regular right falling stroke ㇏ as their last strokes. Other standards use ㇏ as the last stroke, e.g. Mainland China () and Japan (). *
in the ''Dictionary of Chinese Character Variants'' by the National Languages Committee This character has a long horizontal stroke, so it cannot have a hook to the right. Other standards do not follow this rule as closely, e.g. Mainland China () and Japan ().


References

{{reflist Chinese characters Language education in Taiwan