How many catties is 1 bucket and how much is a bucket?

Updated on culture 2024-06-09
16 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    The following is an excerpt from "On the Problem of Ancient Grain Clocks and Stones".

    Ancient commonly used capacity units from small to large have liters, buckets, Hu (stone), bells, usually scholars believe that Hu and stone are connected, since the Qin and Han dynasties, they are all decimal system

    Lin Ganquan's "General History of China's Economy: Economic History of the Qin and Han Dynasties (I)" also identifies that in the Han Dynasty, 1 stone = 2 city buckets, 1 city bucket = jin, and 1 stone = 27 city jin millet.

    In the Han Dynasty, 1 stone was 20,000 ml, and 1 bucket was 2,000 ml, that is, 1 bucket of He weighed in the Qin and Han dynasties, which was also measured in kind

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    In the Han Dynasty, 1 stone was 20,000 ml, and 1 bucket was 2,000 ml, that is, 1 bucket of He weighed in the Qin and Han dynasties, one stone (read: Dan) = 10 buckets, and one bucket = 10 liters.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    It is true that the bucket is a unit of volume, but some elderly people and some remote villages are still using this old-fashioned measuring instrument, which is mostly used to weigh grain. Conversion to: one stone (read:

    Dan) = 10 buckets, one bucket = 10 liters, because the weight of each bucket is different depending on the type of grain (specific gravity). Generally, each bucket is between 45 and 50 catties.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    Municipal capacity unit, 10 liters is equal to 1 bucket. An old grain measuring utensil. Something shaped slightly like a bucket: funnel, pipe, Big Dipper. Circular fingerprints.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Bucket is a unit of volume! You know?

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    One bucket is ten liters, and in China's municipal capacity unit, ten liters is one bucket, ten buckets are one stone, and one hundred and twenty catties is one stone. In ancient times, the commonly used unit conversion standards were:

    Stone: Ten buckets for one stone, one hundred and twenty catties for one stone.

    Hu: Capacity unit, five buckets for one.

    Jun: a unit of weight, thirty catties is one jun.

    Foot: A unit of length, half a step for the foot.

    仞: A unit of length, in ancient times, seven feet or eight feet was a unit.

    House: A unit of length, in ancient times, thirty miles was used as a rounding when marching.

    Fathom: a unit of length, eight feet for a fathom.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    "One bucket is ten liters. Bucket is a measure word for the capacity unit of the Chinese municipal system (ten liters for one bucket, ten buckets for one stone). Units in which the capacity is calculated.

    Ten liters for one bucket, and ten buckets for one stone. It is written in the "Sayings": Bucket, ten liters also.

    Meaning, bucket, ten liters of meaning. Bucket and stone are both units converted to 10 buckets for 1 stone.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    1. The bucket is a tool for measuring grain, and the capacity is one bucket. One bucket is equal to ten liters, and ten buckets are equal to one stone. How many kilograms of oil is a liter? , equal to how many kilograms of water? One of these two is a unit of weight, and the other is a unit of capacity, which cannot be converted without a specific substance.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    One liter of rice now weighs a pound, 10 liters of rice is a bucket, a bucket weighs a kilogram, and kilograms.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Ten liters for the bucket, ten buckets for the Hu then one bucket is one or two, then one or two is ten liters.

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Ten liters for a bucket. "Hanshu Legal Chronicles I": "Ten liters are buckets, and ten buckets are hu." ”

    If a bucket is one tael, then one tael is ten liters.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    One bucket is equivalent to about 12 catties now. Lin Ganquan, editor-in-chief, "General History of China's Economy, Qin and Han Dynasties".

    Economic History (I) identifies that in the Han Dynasty, 1 stone = 2 city buckets, 1 city bucket = jin, and 1 stone = 27 city jin millet.

    Bucket and stone are both units converted to 10 buckets for 1 stone. In the Han Dynasty, thirty catties were jun, and four jun were stones. According to this conversion, 1 stone is equal to 120 catties, and 1 bucket is equal to 12 catties.

    Therefore, in ancient times, a bucket was quite slow to fiber about 12 catties now.

    Capacity unit: quintal: Chinese unit of weight.

    The old system of 100 catties is a load, and now it is a city weight of 100 catties.

    Hu: The name of the Chinese antique measuring device, which is also a unit of capacity, was originally ten buckets, and later changed to five buckets.

    L: one-tenth of the container name of a bucket.

    bucket: dǒu, refers to the capacity unit of the Chinese municipal system.

    In ancient times, the commonly used capacity units from small to large included liters, buckets, husk (stones), and bells; Scholars generally believe that Hu and Shi are connected, and since the Qin and Han dynasties, they have been in decimal system.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    One bucket is ten liters, ten buckets are one stone, and one load is 100 catties.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    One bucket is equivalent to the current catty. Bucket and Hu are capacity units in the old days, ten liters are equal to one bucket, and ten buckets are one hundred liters, which is equal to one Hu.

    Jin is China and Southeast Asia.

    The various units of weight used by countries.

    Modern catties are converted according to the habits of various places to burn and the metric system as follows, and 1 catty in the mainland of the Void Country is equal to 500 grams (g).

    Ancient system conversion. Han Lu Qi Tang system, a Hu 10 buckets, 100 liters, 1000 he, 2000 gong. The Song Dynasty was restructured, with the weight unit stone as the capacity unit, one stone 2 Hu 10 buckets, now abolished.

    Qin and Han dynasties. One liter is about 180 220 ml. Wei and Jin dynasties.

    It grew substantially, to about 600 660 milliliters per liter during the Sui, Tang, Liao, and Song dynasties. During the Song and Yuan dynasties, it continued to grow, with a liter of about 1,000 ml at the beginning of the Ming Dynasty, and it also increased since then.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    One load is equal to 100 catties. Units in which the capacity is calculated. Ten liters for one bucket, and ten buckets for one stone.

    Buckets and stones are converted between units to 10 buckets to accompany Wang.

    Capacity unit: quintal: Chinese unit of weight.

    The old system of 100 catties is a load, and now it is a city weight of 100 catties.

    Hu: The name of the old Chinese measuring instrument, it is also a unit of capacity, and one Hu was originally ten buckets, and later changed to five buckets.

    L: one-tenth of the container name of a bucket.

    bucket: dǒu, refers to the capacity unit of the Chinese municipal system.

    In ancient times, the commonly used capacity units from small to large sliding swim included liter, bucket, Hu (stone), and bell; Usually scholars admit that the letter is sold indiscriminately as Hu and Shitong, since the Qin and Han dynasties.

    In the beginning, they are all decimal between them.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    One bucket is equivalent to the current catty. 斗 (pinyin: dǒu, dòu), a commonly used Chinese character (first-class character), the traditional Chinese characters for dou and dou are the earliest from the oracle bone inscription, and the original meaning of the two characters has its own meaning.

    The original meaning of bucket (dǒu) is a kind of utensils for holding wine, and it is also used as a tool for measuring grain, and it was later extended to a unit, but the seal text of "Shuowen" has been severely changed from the group section, and the shape of the bucket character from the oracle bone inscription to the Qin and Han dynasties has basically not changed, and the extended meaning has the meaning of something like a bucket.

    The traditional Chinese character of "dou" is pronounced dòu, the original meaning or the image of two people fighting hand-to-hand from the old finger cloak exuded by the cloak, and then the traditional Chinese character of "dou" is added with sound notes to differentiate the character "鬭". Now the two words have been abolished, and the "fight" in the pretense of "laughing reputation and rising to fight" has been replaced, and the extended meaning has the meaning of fighting, winning or losing, and winning.

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