Capitalized numbers from one to ten are written like this: one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten. In general, capital figures will be used when filling in documents.
Capitalized fonts, that is, traditional Chinese, have a history of more than 3000 years. Until 1956, it was a standard Chinese character widely used by Chinese people all over the world.
At present, the overseas Chinese in China, Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan, Singapore and Malaysia still use traditional Chinese characters, while in Chinese mainland, traditional Chinese characters are still kept or used under the circumstances of cultural relics, surnames, calligraphy seal cutting, handwritten inscriptions and special needs.
Uppercase number rule
1. In Chinese, the number of money is in yuan. After yuan, you should write "whole" (or "positive"), and after corner, you don't have to write "whole" (or "positive"). Quantity has "points" in words and figures, and the word "whole" (or "positive") is not written after "points".
Two, Chinese amount in words number should be marked with the word "RMB", amount in words number should be followed by the word "RMB" to fill in, can not leave a space. If "RMB" is not printed before the number of amount in words, the word "RMB" should be added. The fixed words "thousand, hundred, ten thousand, thousand, hundred, ten thousand, ten thousand, yuan, jiao and fen" shall not be pre-printed in the "amount in words" column of bills and settlement vouchers.