Learn Chinese characters by writing them
Start with a practical HSK1 path: watch stroke order, trace each character, save progress in this browser, then turn the same set into printable sheets, saved-set reuse, review, daily routine, and study plan.
Today’s short practice loop
Start from 明 · míng, keep the session short, and carry the same set into paper review.
Watch stroke order
Watch the animation once and notice direction, corners, and final stroke placement.
Trace once
Complete one tracing quiz so missed strokes are saved for review.
Leave review cues
Any missed stroke from this run becomes the next review cue, then carries into print, family plan, saved-set reuse, progress, daily routine, and study plan.
Print to reinforce
When the set feels stable, print it and write once away from the screen.
Practice guides
Set the goal before practice, then feed missed strokes, family plan, assignment handoff, daily routine, and paper review into the next session.
Put the method into practice
Practice, print, assignment, paper review, family plan, save, daily routine, review, progress, study plan, and article links keep this 3-character set from the current page.
HSK1 character list and practice order
See how the 50 free HSK1 launch characters map into real practice groups.
A 10-minute HSK1 practice loop
Use short sessions to combine new characters, review, and printable worksheets.
Why handwriting still matters
See why stroke order, spacing, and paper practice support durable memory.
How to use printable worksheets
Plan clean paper assignments for self-study, tutoring, or classrooms.
person
Two strokes, like a person standing.
moon / month
A narrow body with two short inner strokes.
bright / next
Sun on the left, moon on the right; keep both parts narrow.