The strokes for ashamed are written as follows:
Shame
Pinyin: cán kuì.
Interpretation:
1. To feel uneasy or ashamed because of shortcomings, mistakes, or failure to do one's duty, etc.
Ba Jin's "The Dumbed Down Triangle": "I'm ashamed to say that we didn't do what we promised him."
2. A word of gratitude. It means thanks a lot, rare and lucky.
Yuan Zhang Shouqing's "Red Pear Blossom", Fracture 1: "I am ashamed to have the chance to meet this little lady."
Synonyms
1. Shame
Pinyin: xiū kuì.
Interpretation: inferiority, shame.
Origin: Lu Xun, "Gleanings and Supplements from the Collected Works - The Side of Celebrating the Recovery of Huning": "One should really be ashamed of oneself for having tricked the audience into clapping after a few lines of nonsense in the lecture hall."
Example sentence: His active cooperation made me ashamed of what I had said.
2. Guilt
Pinyin: nèi jiù.
Interpretation: to feel ashamed and uneasy in one's heart.
Origin: Ba Jin, "Remembering Xiaoshan" II: "I look at him with a guilty conscience."