Who knows what books there are about font science in China?

First of all, Shuo Wen Jie Zi was written by Xu Shen in the Eastern Han Dynasty. It is the earliest dictionary in China, with 9,353 words, including seal script, ancient prose, Wen Shu and other forms, which can help us grasp the original meaning of words and understand the source of meaning.

2. Kangxi Dictionary, edited by Zhang Yushu in Qing Dynasty. * * * 47,000 words, which is the dictionary with the largest number of Chinese characters in China.

3. The Dictionary of Common Words in Ancient Chinese is a small dictionary to help beginners learn ancient Chinese and master the common meanings of common words in ancient books.

Needless to say, Ci Yuan is a dictionary dedicated to reading ancient books and studying ancient literature and history.

Up to now, The Great Chinese Dictionary contains the largest Chinese dictionary that records the historical evolution of words in detail.

Yang Shuda's Shuo Wen Jie Zi, like Shuo Wen Jie Zi in Jing Zhuan of Wang Yin in Qing Dynasty, is an explanation of the function words commonly used in ancient books, which focuses on the function words in the pre-Qin and Han dynasties.

Needless to say, Ci Hai records the most detailed encyclopedia to date.

The Lexical Interpretation of Poetry and Quyu was written by Zhang Xiang. Published in 1953. There are many colloquial words that were easy to understand at that time, especially the function words. In the past, these oral words were regarded as "linguistic interpretations", which were often not included or explained in old dictionaries, and were ignored by poetry commentators.

Needless to say, Xinhua dictionary.