How to write in traditional Chinese from 1 to 1?

Traditional writing of one to ten: one, two, three, four, five, land, seven, eight, nine, and ten

Introduction:

The above is the traditional writing of one to ten. In fact, the traditional writing of one to ten is the capitalization of one to ten, which is generally used on bills. It is said that it is written from one to ten. Among them, it is clearly required that the number of bookkeeping must be changed from "one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, hundred and thousand" to "one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, one hundred (odd) and one thousand (odd). Later, "Mo" and "Qian" were rewritten as "Bai, Qian" and have been used until now.

Extended materials

Traditional Chinese, that is, the Chinese writing system that came into being after the evolution of Xiao Zhuan into official script (followed by regular script, running script, cursive script, etc.), has a history of more than 2, years, and has been the common Chinese writing standard for Chinese people everywhere until the 2th century.

since 195s, the simplification made by the Chinese people and the Chinese government on the basis of traditional Chinese has formed a new Chinese writing standard, namely simplified Chinese. Simplified Chinese is mainly composed of inherited characters and simplified characters that have been promoted by the Chinese people and the Chinese government since the 195s. At present, simplified Chinese is mainly used in mainland China and Southeast Asia (such as Malaysia and Singapore), while traditional Chinese is mainly used in Taiwan Province, China, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and Macao Special Administrative Region.

the principles of simplifying traditional Chinese characters into simplified Chinese characters are "saying without doing" and "making steady progress by convention", that is to say, the simplified Chinese characters that have been popular among the people for a long time should be adopted as far as possible, and only the necessary changes should be made, and the simplification should follow the principle of "making steady progress by convention". It includes two aspects:

First, the number of words should be simplified, and the homonyms with different forms should be abolished. In 1955, China's Ministry of Culture and the Chinese Language Reform Commission published the First List of Variant Characters, and 155 variant characters were abolished.

the second is to reduce strokes. In 1964, the Chinese Character Reform Commission, the Ministry of Culture and the Ministry of Education published the Summary of Simplified Characters, which contained 2,238 simplified characters, simplifying the traditional Chinese characters with an average of 16 to 19 drawings per word into simplified characters with an average of 8 to 11 drawings per word.

Reference: Traditional Chinese Characters-Baidu Encyclopedia