How to write 10 in traditional Chinese? One to ten.

The traditional writing of one to ten: one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, and ten.

Source:

In the early years of the Ming Dynasty, Zhu Yuanzhang issued a decree because of the "Guo Huan Case", a major corruption case at that time, which clearly required that the figures for accounting must be determined by "one ", two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, one hundred, thousand" was changed to "one, two, three, four, five, land, seven, eight, nine, ten, mo, qian" and other complex Chinese characters to make it more difficult to alter the account books. Later, "Mo" and "阡" were rewritten as "百、千", and they have been used to this day.

Extended information:

Traditional Chinese characters, also known as Traditional Chinese, are called Traditional Chinese (Traditional Chinese) in European and American countries. They generally refer to Chinese characters that have been replaced by simplified characters during the simplification movement of Chinese characters. , sometimes also refers to the entire Chinese regular script and official script writing system before the Chinese character simplification movement. Traditional Chinese has a history of more than three thousand years, and until 1956 it was the standard Chinese character commonly used by Chinese people everywhere.

The large-scale simplification movement of Chinese characters in modern times began in the Taiping Kingdom. Simplified characters mainly came from the regular script of ancient characters, popular characters, variant characters, running script and cursive script of all dynasties. In 1935, the Ministry of Education of the National Government of the Republic of China promulgated the "First Batch of Simplified Chinese Character Lists", but it was shelved due to the opposition of Dai Jitao, the director of the Examination Yuan. On January 28, 1956, the State Council of the People's Republic of China issued the "Resolution on the Announcement of the "Chinese Character Simplification Plan", and mainland China began to fully implement simplified characters. In the 1970s, there were a batch of two simplified characters, and later was abolished.

The regions that still use traditional Chinese characters include China’s Taiwan region, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and Macao Special Administrative Region. Countries in the Chinese character cultural circle, overseas Chinese communities such as Singapore and Malaysia mostly use traditional and simplified characters. In mainland China, traditional Chinese characters coexist. Traditional Chinese characters should be retained or used for cultural relics, surname variations, calligraphy and seal cutting, handwritten inscriptions, and special needs.

In January 2001, the "Law of the People's Republic of China on the Standard Spoken and Written Chinese Language" was implemented, which clearly stipulated that China should promote standardized Chinese characters and also clearly defined the scope of retaining or using traditional Chinese characters. On June 5, 2013, the State Council of China announced the "General Standard Chinese Character Table", including the appendix "Comparison Table of Standard Characters, Traditional Chinese Characters and Variant Characters". The use of Chinese characters in general application fields shall be subject to the standard Chinese character list.

Reference material: Chinese digital Baidu Encyclopedia