How to write traditional Chinese characters for drunken dreamers?

The Traditional Chinese characters of "drunken dreamers" are as follows:

[ Traditional Chinese characters ]

Traditional Chinese characters, also known as traditional Chinese characters, were called regular Chinese characters in The First List of Simplified Chinese Characters in 1935, and they were called traditional Chinese in Europe and America, which generally refers to Chinese characters that were replaced by simplified Chinese characters in the Chinese character simplification movement, and sometimes also refers to Chinese characters. Traditional Chinese has a history of more than 3, years. Until the civil war in China, it was always the standard Chinese writing character used by Chinese people everywhere.

The large-scale Chinese character simplification movement in modern times originated in the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom. In order to improve the literacy rate, the imperial seals and official documents were simplified. During the period of the Republic of China, the government of China promoted simplified Chinese characters on a large scale, which was abolished after being strongly opposed by all walks of life. On January 28th, 1956, the State Council issued the Resolution on Promulgating the Simplified Chinese Characters Scheme, and Chinese mainland began to fully implement simplified Chinese characters. In the 197s, there were a number of simplified Chinese characters, which were later abolished.

At present, the traditional Chinese characters are still used in Taiwan Province, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and Macao Special Administrative Region of China, countries in Chinese character cultural circle, and overseas Chinese communities such as Singapore and Malaysia. Traditional Chinese characters are kept or used in the mainland of China under the circumstances of cultural relics, surname variants, calligraphy seal cutting, handwritten inscriptions and special needs.

In January p>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 retaining or using traditional Chinese characters was also clearly defined. On June 5th, 213, the State Council, China, published the List of General Standardized Chinese Characters, including the attached Table "Comparison Table of Standardized Chinese Characters, Traditional Chinese Characters and Variant Chinese Characters". The use of Chinese characters in general application fields is subject to the list of specifications.