How to write two words

The answer to how to write two characters is as follows: horizontal, vertical, horizontal hook, left, dot, left, dot.

liǎng. "Two" is simplified to "two". Based on the ancient calligraphy, it is simplified and saved. Also known as the word "両".

"Shuowen Jiezi": "Two, twenty-four baht is one tael. From one;?, divided equally, also sounds.". Killing two birds with one stone is a paradigm. 1. Superposition of the two paradigms. Specifically refers to the paradigm of twenty-four baht as the weight measurement unit of two.

Original meaning: Chinese market weight unit: Shiliang (one city catty. The old system was sixteen liang to one market catty). Half a pound or two (meaning that they are the same as each other, on par with each other, with a derogatory meaning). Meaning: also used as number, two. Generally used before quantifiers and "one, half, thousand, ten thousand, billion". For example: two orioles. Two books.

Extension: extended to refer to "both parties". For example: liangke, liangbian, liangbian (a polite term for mutual convenience), both sides, both sides, liangxiuqingfeng, lose-lose. Meaning: It also means an indefinite number. Such as: two strokes, two strokes (zhāor). Meaning: Also used as a surname?

Detailed meaning:

1. Knowing. From one, two equal parts. Two voices. Original meaning: Twenty-four baht is one tael. Same as the original meaning [liang, a unit of weight] 16 liang is 1 catty. Today's market system is equivalent to 0.05 kilogram in the International System of Units, which is ten cents per tael and ten taels per catty.

Two, twenty-four baht is one tael. ——"Shuowen"

Weight-weighing originated from Huang Zhongzhi. One huang contains 1,200 millet and weighs 12 bahts. Two is liang, 24 baht is liang, and 16 liang is a catty. The two are the most important of the two yellow bells. ——"Han Shu·Lü Li Zhi 1"

2. Double. Used for shoes Lou [two] One or two brown shoes with eight feet of vines, traveling all over Guangling and Jinling. The piece (four feet long) belongs to Mrs. Yuxuan, with thirty taels of heavy brocade. (Tong "chariot". One chariot rides King Wu's military chariot with three hundred taels. When his son returns, he will take one hundred taels to guard him.