Shao is a traditional Chinese character.
1. A brief introduction
1. Shao, a Chinese secondary word, pronounced Shao, refers to an ancient place name, which is also used as a surname in Yuanqu County, Shanxi Province, China; < Name > Ancient place name [Shao county]: Shao, Jinyiye. -Shuo Wen, Shao. -"Zuo Zhuan Xiang Gong Twenty-three Years"; Jinyi in the Spring and Autumn Period. In today's Jiyuan County, Henan Province, west, Yuanqu County, Shanxi Province, east. After the Wei Dynasty, it was changed to Shaojun, and the later Zhou Dynasty was changed to Shaozhou.
2. Ancient state name [shao preference]. It is equivalent to Shaowu County and other places in Fujian Province today; The ancient county name [Shao district]. That is, Shaoling County, which is equivalent to Shaoyang City, Hunan Province and Xinshao, Shaoyang and other counties; Water name [Shao river]. Shaoshui originated in Longshan. The west flows to Tongjiang River and Tanjiang River, and water is injected into the east of Baoqing County, Hunan Province; Surname (called in Hanshu).
2. Traditional Chinese characters
1. Traditional Chinese characters, a font form of Chinese characters, are called "traditional Chinese" in Europe and America, which generally refers to the Chinese characters replaced by simplified characters in the Chinese character simplification movement, and sometimes refers to the whole Chinese character regular script and official script writing system before the Chinese character simplification movement. Traditional Chinese has a history of more than two thousand years.
2. Until 1956, it was the standard Chinese word commonly used by Chinese people everywhere. Traditional Chinese characters are still used in China, Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan, and overseas Chinese communities such as Singapore and Malaysia are mostly complicated and simplified. In mainland China, traditional Chinese characters are retained or used under the circumstances of cultural relics, surname variants, calligraphy seal cutting, handwritten inscriptions and special needs.
3. In January, 21, the Law of the People's Republic of China on the Common Language and Characters was implemented, which clearly stipulated that standardized Chinese characters should be promoted in China, and the scope of traditional Chinese characters was also clarified. On June 5, 213, the schedule of the General Standardized Chinese Characters List, the Comparison Table of Standardized Characters, Traditional Chinese Characters and Variant Chinese Characters, was published. The use of Chinese characters in general application fields is subject to the standardized Chinese characters list.