Huns use Chinese characters, which may be ancient Chinese or one of them. Throughout China's ancient books, such as Historical Records, Hanshu and Houhanshu, there is no record of any language barrier between Xiongnu and Han Dynasty, nor what needs to be translated. No evidence is the best evidence. In addition, Xiongnu first appeared in the ancient Hetao area, including some places in western Inner Mongolia, Ningxia, Gansu, Shaanxi and Shanxi, and China ancient books did not say that there were language barriers in communication with people in the Central Plains.
2. He can drink a lot and master the brewing technology.
In BC 166, Huns Khan asked for "rice tillers" from the Han Dynasty, and Emperor Wendi also gave them to Huns. Tiller is a kind of germinated grain, which is made into koji and used as yeast for wine making, so it is also called qu tiller. The Huns introduced rice tillers and rice tillers from the Han Dynasty into the grassland, indicating that the Huns were able to make wine or semi-process wine at that time. In 89 BC, the Han Dynasty gave the Huns a piece of "mixing tartar". We can easily see the Huns' drinking habits in ancient books. Slave nobles often "give a glass of wine" to reward knights who have military exploits. Jia Yi's new book "Xiongnu": "Because Xiongnu is hungry, drink more"; According to the attached biography of Han Li Guang, Li Ling and Wei Lv "worked hard for Han envoys with ox wine and drank it widely".
3. Dragon worship, with obvious Greek style.
Today, people in China say that they are descendants of the dragon, but the dragon is a very abstract concept in our hearts. In many people's minds, it seems that only Han people or people of the same ethnic origin as Han people worship dragons, and dragons are a collection of multi-ethnic admirers in China, with images of snakes, sheep, fish, horses, chickens and other animals, but this is not entirely the case. It is said that the Huns once dug a pool in front of their court. After the pool was dug, it was filled with water, and suddenly a dragon fell from the world. Since then, Huns have called the seat of their head of state Longcheng and prayed for peace in the worship of dragons. However, the dragons worshipped by Huns are somewhat different from the dragons that China people say today. Many embroideries have been unearthed in the Xiongnu cemetery in Yanwula, Monguno, among which one is called "Xilong Tengfei Embroidery", with a satin bottom and a "dragon" on it, with its head sticking backward and its tail sticking forward. The dragon's four claws are strange in shape, and the shoulders are painted with short wings, which is not the body of the Central Plains dragon and snake. Scholars believe that this kind of dragon has obvious Greek style.