The traditional Chinese character for Yandanshe is Yandanshe.
Introduction to traditional Chinese characters:
Traditional Chinese characters, a font form of Chinese characters, are called "Traditional Chinese" in European and American countries, generally referring to the simplified Chinese character simplification movement The Chinese characters that the characters replace sometimes refer to the entire Chinese regular script and official script writing systems before the Chinese character simplification movement. Traditional Chinese has a history of more than two thousand years, and until 1956 it was the standard Chinese character commonly used by Chinese people everywhere.
Regions that still use traditional Chinese characters include Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan. Overseas Chinese communities such as Singapore and Malaysia mostly use traditional and simplified characters. In mainland China, in cultural relics and monuments, variant characters of surnames, calligraphy and seal cutting, handwritten inscriptions, special needs, etc. Keep or use traditional Chinese characters.
Origin of Traditional Chinese:
Traditional Chinese is the Chinese writing system that emerged after Xiaozhuan evolved into official script (later regular script, running script, cursive script and other calligraphy) and has been in existence for more than 2,000 years. has a long history and has been the common Chinese writing standard among Chinese people everywhere until the 20th century. Beginning in the 1950s, the People's Republic of China and the People's Republic of China officially simplified and formed a new Chinese writing standard on the basis of traditional Chinese, namely simplified Chinese.
Simplified Chinese is mainly composed of inherited characters and simplified characters that began to be implemented by the Central People's Government of the People's Republic of China after the 1950s. Simplified Chinese is mainly used in mainland China and Southeast Asia (such as Malaysia and Singapore), and Traditional Chinese is mainly used in Taiwan Province of China, the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, and the Macau Special Administrative Region.
Development history:
Oracle bone inscriptions are the oldest mature script in China. From oracle bone inscriptions, bronze inscriptions, large seal scripts to small seal scripts, the fonts gradually became mainly line symbols, and the glyphs gradually became fixed. . Since the Southern and Northern Dynasties, vulgar characters with fewer strokes have appeared. For example, in the existing Yuan Dynasty engraving of "Water Margin", the common character "Liu" has appeared.
The simplification of Chinese characters in modern times can be traced back to 1909 (the first year of Xuantong in the Qing Dynasty) when the "Education Magazine", which advocated popular Chinese characters, was founded. Lu Feikui published an article in its first issue, "General Education Should Use Common Chinese Characters."