Write why it is a bald cover.

The original meaning of the writing means that the utensils from other places are moved and placed in this room, so it is a treasure hijab.

Bald treasure cover is not commonly used in modern Chinese. It is only used as a radical, and its duration is called bald treasure cover. The characters with bald treasure cover the military, writing, crown, mystery and injustice. Bald treasure cover refers to the word in Oracle Bone Inscriptions. Bald treasure cover looks like a word, with both ends drooping like a cloth towel, which should be the most primitive hat to show that it is covered. Later, bald treasure cover is only used as a radical to show the meaning of covering.

brief introduction to the text

Modern Chinese characters refer to the capitalized Chinese characters, including traditional Chinese characters and simplified Chinese characters. Modern Chinese characters evolved from Oracle Bone Inscriptions, bronze inscriptions, calligraphy and seal script to official script, cursive script, regular script and running script. Chinese characters were invented and improved by the ancestors of the Han nationality, which is an indispensable link to maintain the dialect areas of the Han nationality.

The earliest recognizable Chinese characters are Oracle Bone Inscriptions of the Shang Dynasty in about 13 BC and later inscriptions on bronze, then Xiao Zhuan and Li Shu in the Qin Dynasty, and then Li Shu prevailed in the Han and Wei Dynasties. At the end of the Han Dynasty, Li Shu was converted into block letters, which prevailed in Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties and is still popular today.

Chinese characters have been used for the longest time up to now, and they are the only ones that have been passed down to this day in various Daimonji systems in ancient times. Chinese characters have been used as the main official characters in all dynasties in China. In ancient times, Chinese characters were not only used in China, but also served as the only international communication characters in East Asia for a long time.

Before the 2th century, Japan, the Korean Peninsula, Vietnam, Ryukyu and other countries were the official written standard characters, and all East Asian countries created their own Chinese characters to some extent. In the non-Chinese system, the Japanese have simplified Chinese characters and formulated new Japanese fonts, and South Korea has also formulated official norms for the use of Korean Chinese characters, while Vietnam, North Korea, Mongolia and other countries that used Chinese characters in history have now abandoned Chinese characters.