What do these quantifiers have to do with bamboo slips?

The specific relationship is as follows: ancient articles were written on bamboo slips, and in order to maintain the integrity of the front and back, they were woven together with ropes or pimps, which were called "articles". String together with a cowhide rope, which is a "book".

When you write on bamboo slips, you also write on silk fabrics. This kind of book is called silk. This written silk is rolled into a tube that can be stretched by a shaft, and each tube is called a "roll".

Commonly used quantifiers

1. Quantifiers for people: ge, wei, tiao and wei are more formal and polite usages, but the usage of tiao is limited.

A person, an adult, a child, a girl, a boy, a painter, a driver, a worker, a farmer, a soldier, a friend, a classmate, a teacher, a guest, an officer, a representative and a hero.

2. Quantifiers of animals: only, horse, head, strip and peak.

A dog, a bird, a monkey, a chicken, an elephant, a sheep, a cat, a mouse, a butterfly, a bug, a horse, a cow, a sheep, a donkey, a mule, a leopard, a snake, a fish, a bug and a camel.

3. Quantifiers representing human and animal organs: ge, zhi, ke, root, zhang, pian and tiao. Except for Ge and Zhi, most of them represent shapes.

Brain, head, hair, eyebrows, eyes, nose, ears, mouth, lips, teeth, tongue, chin, arms, hands, fingers, fists, legs, feet, tail and heart.