Basic meaning: Chinese characters, pronounced as auspicious incarnation, are now basically used in the capitalized form of the numeral "JIU". Mostly used for bills, accounts, etc.
The first and last decomposition: Wang Jiu, component decomposition: Wang Jiu, variant: nine.
Nine, the second stone is jade black. From jade, long sound. "Poetry" says: "I admire nine." Explain in vernacular Chinese: 9. Blackstone beside Shi Zhongyu. The glyph takes "jade" as the side and "dragon" as the sound side. There is a poem in the Book of Songs that sings, "Give me nine wearable stones."
Use of capital figures:
The initiator should be Wu Zetian who is full of reform spirit. She is a unique queen who dares to write her own words, as evidenced by her name "Wan".
According to Gu, a famous scholar and textual research scholar in the late Ming and early Qing Dynasties, the statue of Daiyue Temple is a stone tablet erected in China, with capital figures on it. Gu textual research said: "every number is one, two, three, four, five, land, seven, eight, nine, etc." It was all changed by Wuhou. "