Step-by-Step Guide to Writing Your First 20 Chinese Characters

Learning to write Chinese characters (汉字, hàn zì) is one of the most rewarding experiences for beginners. Writing allows you to internalize stroke order, understand character structure, and remember meaning more effectively.

Chinese Idiom (Part 1)

In this guide, we will walk you step by step through 20 essential Chinese characters, explain their stroke order, and provide example sentences to help you use them in daily life.

Why Writing Characters Matters

Chinese Idioms (Part 2)

Writing Chinese characters is more than memorization. Each character is composed of strokes in a specific order, which not only helps with legibility but also connects the character to its meaning. Writing reinforces recognition, pronunciation, and understanding of radicals—the building blocks of Chinese characters. By mastering these first 20 characters, you build a strong foundation for reading, writing, and speaking Chinese.

Step-by-Step Guide to Writing Your First 20 Chinese Characters

Step 1: Start With Simple Characters

It’s best to begin with simple characters with fewer strokes. This builds confidence and helps you practice proper stroke order.

1. 人 (rén) – Person

  • Strokes: 2
  • Stroke order: Left stroke first, right stroke second
  • Example sentence: 他是好人 (tā shì hǎo rén) – He is a good person

2. 我 (wǒ) – I / Me

  • Strokes: 7
  • Example sentence: 我喜欢学习中文 (wǒ xǐ huān xué xí zhōng wén) – I like learning Chinese

3. 你 (nǐ) – You

  • Strokes: 7
  • Example sentence: 你好吗 (nǐ hǎo ma) – How are you?
Chinese Idioms (Part 3)

4. 是 (shì) – To be / Is / Are

  • Strokes: 9
  • Example sentence: 他是老师 (tā shì lǎo shī) – He is a teacher

5. 不 (bù) – Not / No

  • Strokes: 4
  • Example sentence: 我不是学生 (wǒ bù shì xué shēng) – I am not a student

Step 2: Add Characters for Objects and Places

Once you’re comfortable with pronouns and basic verbs, move to common nouns that appear in daily life.

6. 水 (shuǐ) – Water

  • Strokes: 4
  • Example sentence: 我想喝水 (wǒ xiǎng hē shuǐ) – I want to drink water
Chinese Idiom (Part 4)

7. 火 (huǒ) – Fire

  • Strokes: 4
  • Example sentence: 小心火 (xiǎo xīn huǒ) – Be careful of fire

8. 天 (tiān) – Sky / Day

  • Strokes: 4
  • Example sentence: 今天的天气很好 (jīn tiān de tiān qì hěn hǎo) – The weather is nice today

9. 地 (dì) – Ground / Place

  • Strokes: 6
  • Example sentence: 地上有水 (dì shàng yǒu shuǐ) – There is water on the ground
Chinese Idioms (Part 5)

10. 家 (jiā) – Home / Family

  • Strokes: 10
  • Example sentence: 我的家很大 (wǒ de jiā hěn dà) – My home is big

Step 3: Learn Action Characters

Action characters are verbs and essential for forming simple sentences.

11. 吃 (chī) – To eat

  • Strokes: 6
  • Example sentence: 我喜欢吃米饭 (wǒ xǐ huān chī mǐ fàn) – I like eating rice
Chinese Idioms (Part 6)

12. 喝 (hē) – To drink

  • Strokes: 9
  • Example sentence: 我早上喝茶 (wǒ zǎo shàng hē chá) – I drink tea in the morning

13. 走 (zǒu) – To walk / Go

  • Strokes: 7
  • Example sentence: 我们走路去学校 (wǒ men zǒu lù qù xué xiào) – We walk to school

14. 学 (xué) – To study / Learn

  • Strokes: 8
  • Example sentence: 我在学习中文 (wǒ zài xué xí zhōng wén) – I am studying Chinese

15. 看 (kàn) – To see / Look

  • Strokes: 9
  • Example sentence: 我在看电视 (wǒ zài kàn diàn shì) – I am watching TV
Simple Chinese Sentences (Part 1)

Step 4: Characters for Common Objects and Items

These characters appear frequently in signs, menus, and daily interactions.

16. 书 (shū) – Book

  • Strokes: 4
  • Example sentence: 我有一本书 (wǒ yǒu yī běn shū) – I have a book

17. 桌 (zhuō) – Table

  • Strokes: 10
  • Example sentence: 桌子上有一本书 (zhuō zi shàng yǒu yī běn shū) – There is a book on the table

18. 椅 (yǐ) – Chair

  • Strokes: 12
  • Example sentence: 请坐在椅子上 (qǐng zuò zài yǐ zi shàng) – Please sit on the chair
Simple Chinese Sentences (Part 2)

19. 门 (mén) – Door / Gate

  • Strokes: 3
  • Example sentence: 门开着还是关着 (mén kāi zhe hái shì guān zhe) – Is the door open or closed?

20. 车 (chē) – Vehicle / Car

  • Strokes: 7
  • Example sentence: 我开车去公司 (wǒ kāi chē qù gōng sī) – I drive to the office

Step 5: Practice Stroke Order and Repetition

  • Always start from top to bottom, left to right.
  • Use grid paper to maintain proportions.
  • Write each character at least 5–10 times a day.
  • Say the character and its pinyin aloud as you write to reinforce memory.
Simple Chinese Sentences (Part 3)

Tips for Making Writing Fun and Effective

  1. Create Short Sentences: Use multiple learned characters in a sentence to practice context.
  2. Label Objects Around You: Write the character and place it on the item.
  3. Combine Characters Into Words: For example, 学 (xué) + 校 (xiào) = 学校 (xué xiào) – school
  4. Use Apps or Flashcards: Review stroke order and examples digitally to reinforce learning.
  5. Daily 10-Minute Practice: Even short, consistent practice beats long, infrequent sessions.

By following this step-by-step guide, you will have written your first 20 Chinese characters correctly, understand their meanings, and be able to use them in simple daily sentences. Writing regularly builds confidence, improves memorization, and opens the door to more complex characters in the future.

Simple Chinese Sentences for Beginners (Part 4)

Vocabulary

  1. 人 (rén) – person
  2. 我 (wǒ) – I / me
  3. 你 (nǐ) – you
  4. 是 (shì) – to be / is / are
  5. 不 (bù) – not / no
  6. 水 (shuǐ) – water
  7. 天 (tiān) – sky / day
  8. 家 (jiā) – home / family
  9. 吃 (chī) – to eat
  10. 学 (xué) – to study / learn
  11. 看 (kàn) – to see / look
  12. 走 (zǒu) – to walk / go
  13. 书 (shū) – book
  14. 桌 (zhuō) – table
  15. 椅 (yǐ) – chair
  16. 门 (mén) – door / gate
  17. 车 (chē) – vehicle / car
  18. 火 (huǒ) – fire
  19. 地 (dì) – ground / place
  20. 喝 (hē) – to drink
Simple Chinese Sentences (Part 5)

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