-
1. The order of writing one is shown in the following figure:
2. The order of writing two is shown in the following figure:
3. The order of writing the three is shown in the following figure:
4. The order of writing is shown in the following figure:
5. The order of writing Wu is shown in the following figure:
6. The order of writing Lu is shown in the following figure:
7. The order of writing Seven is shown in the following figure:
8. The order of writing is shown in the following figure:
9. The order of writing Jiu is shown in the following figure:
10. The order of writing is shown in the following figure:
-
Traditional Chinese characters from 1 to 10: 壹, 贰, 三, 叁, 叁, 武, 龒, 柒, 捌, 玖, 拾.
Caps are a unique way of writing numbers in China, using Chinese characters that are homophonic to numbers instead of numbers to prevent them from being altered. According to research, capitalized numbers were first invented by Wu Zetian, and later improved by Zhu Yuanzhang, and have been used to this day.
Chinese capitalized numbers should be filled in block letters or lines, such as one (one), two (two), three, four (four), Wu (Wu), Lu (Lu), Qi, 捌, Jiu, pick, Bai, thousand, ten thousand (million), billion, yuan, angle, minute, zero, whole (positive) and other words.
Do not use. One, two (two), three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, reading, mao, another (or 0) to fill in, shall not make their own simplified words. If traditional Chinese characters are used in the writing of the amount figures, such as two, land, billion, ten thousand, and yuan, it should also be accepted.
-
The lowercase of Chinese characters to 10 is: one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten;
The Chinese characters to 10 are capitalized as: 壹, 贰, 叁, 偁, 寀, 武, 庐, 柒, 捌, 玖, and 拾.
-
The lowercase of Chinese characters from 1 to 10 is: 一, 二, 三, 四, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10.
The Chinese characters from 1 to 10 are capitalized: 壹, 贰, 叁, 喀, 叀, Wu, Lu, 柒, 捌, Jiu, and 拾.
一Pinyin yī1, several names, the smallest positive integer.
It is often used on banknotes and documents with a capital "one" generation).
2. Pure; Specialized: Single-minded.
3. Full; Full: A lifetime.
4. Same: the same.
5. Other: crickets.
A weaver. 6. It means that the action is short, or one-time, or tentative: do the math.
7, Nai; Competition: That's it.
1. Same [yī yàng].
Equally; There is no difference: the two brothers look good, and their tempers are also. The two of them shot accurately.
2. Together [yī qǐ].
One place: sitting.
3. Certain [yī dìng].
Attribute words. prescribed; OK: To follow the procedure of .
4. Some [yī xiē].
Indicate a variable amount: you can't finish these tasks, give them to me.
5. Always [yī zhí].
It means that it will not change in one direction: walk, not turn. To the east, there you are.
-
Kanji 1-10 are written as follows:1. The order of writing one is shown in the following figure:
2. The order of writing two is shown in the following figure:
3. The order of writing the three is shown in the following figure:
4. The order of writing is shown in the following figure:
5. The order of writing Wu is shown in the following figure:
6. The order of writing Lu is shown in the following figure:
7. The order of writing Seven is shown in the following figure:
8. The order of writing is shown in the following figure:
9. The order of writing Jiu is shown in the following figure:
10. The order of writing is shown in the following figure:
-
One, bai, two, three, four, wu, lu, qi, du, zhijiu, pick.
壹pinyin yī radical: 士dao部, 部外strokes.
Wubi: FPGU, Cangjie: GBMT, Zheng code: BWJU structure: upper, middle and lower, code: 1105
Definition: Capitalization of "一".
1. 壹再 [yī zài].
Repeatedly. Again and again, again and again.
2. 泰壹 [tài yī].
Also known as "Taiyi", the name of the legendary god.
3. 壹齐 [yī qí].
Uniformity, uniformity.
4. 壹何 [yī hé].
How; How.
5. 常壹 [cháng yī].
Consistent.
-
The format of writing Chinese characters from one to ten.
-
One, two, three, four, Wu, Lu, Qi, 捌, Jiu, pick.
One, two, three, four
Five, six, seven, eight
Nine and ten are Chinese uppercase, Chinese lowercase, Arabic numerals, respectively.
-
One, two, three, four, Wu, Lu, Qi, 捌, Jiu, pick.
-
The uppercase Chinese characters from 1 to 10 are 壹, 贰, 叁, 儁, 儡, 囒, Lu, Qi, 捌, Jiu, and 拾.
It doesn't matter if it's Arabic numerals ......Or Chinese characters lowercase digits (one, two, three......Because of the simplicity of the strokes, they are easy to be altered and forged for. Therefore, the numbers on the general documents and commercial financial instruments should be capitalized in Chinese characters: one, two, three, four, wu, lu, qi, 捌, jiu, pick, bai, thousand ("trillion, billion, trillion" itself has been more complicated, and there are few opportunities to use it, so there is no need to replace it with other words).
For example, "3564 yuan" is written as "three thousand Wu Bai Lu Shi Yuan".
These Chinese characters were produced very early, and they were used as capital numbers, which is a kind of borrowing. This kind of complicated writing of numbers has been fully used as early as the Tang Dynasty, and later gradually standardized into a set of "uppercase numbers".
-
The lowercase of Chinese characters from 1 to 10 is: one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine greenhouses, ten.
The Chinese characters from 1 to 10 are capitalized: 壹, 贰, 叁, rolling fingers, wu, lu, qi, 捌, jiu, and pick.
一Pinyin yī1, the number of names, the smallest positive integer (often capitalized "one" generation on banknotes and documents).
2. Pure; Specialized: Single-minded.
3. Full; Full: A lifetime.
4. Same: the same.
5. Another: a cricket to promote weaving.
6. It means that the action is short, or one-time, or tentative: do the math.
7, Nai; Competition: That's it.
Equally; There is no difference: the two brothers look good, and their tempers are also. The two of them shot accurately.
2. Together [yī qǐ].
One place: sitting.
3. Certain [yī dìng].
Attribute words. prescribed; OK: To follow the procedure of .
4. Some [yī xiē].
Indicate a variable amount: you can't finish these tasks, give them to me.
5. Always [yī zhí].
It means that the same direction is the same: walk, do not turn. To the east, there you are. <>
Kanji 八 (dictionary, compound words).
Pronunciation: bā, radical eight. >>>More
The Chinese character five is written as follows: >>>More
One, two, three, four, Wu, Lu, Qi, 捌, Jiu, pick.
Caps are a unique way of writing numbers in China, using Chinese characters that are homophonic to numbers instead of numbers to prevent them from being altered. According to research, capitalized numbers were first invented by Wu Zetian and later improved by Zhu Yuanzhang. >>>More
Traveling in the Kingdom of Chinese Characters".
You can start by writing (1) interesting Chinese characters. >>>More
Lowercase: one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten. >>>More