Ye Laishi made statistics on 521 commonly used simplified characters among the 2,274 simplified characters in the "General List of Simplified Characters" and found that 101 of them appeared in the liberated areas and after the founding of the People's Republic of China (China's ***product Many simplified characters were used and created in a large number of publications and propaganda materials in the anti-Japanese base areas and liberated areas under the leadership of the party. These newly created simplified characters are called "liberation characters"). The remaining 420 characters (more than 80%) were all written before liberation. Popular or existing ones {there are 68 characters for Pre-Qin, 96 for Qin and Han, 32 for Three Kingdoms, Two Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties, 29 for Sui, Tang and Five Dynasties, 82 for Song, Liao, Jin and Yuan, 53 for Ming and Qing, and 60 for the Republic of China. indivual.
In the "Jijiuzhang" of the Han Dynasty History Tour, there are: Shi, Dong, Chen, Sun, Jian, Zhang, Xiang, Lou, Lai, Jia, Cheek, Xia, Ji, Bei, Xue, Jian, Wei , pseudo, long, Zhang, Sui, Zhuang, asked, Jue, Yue, Du, Du, Duan, Bian, Dan
Wang Xizhi of the Jin Dynasty used: Dong, Qi, Shi, Wei, Myanmar, Lin , end, Zhang, Shi, Jiang, Jian, Dang, Sun, Yang, Shi, Er, Li, Yu, Yu, Zhao, Chang, Le, Chen, Lai, Cheng, Jue, Gu, Disaster, Kuan, Drink, Xie , Yang, Xue, Wan, Fa, asked, disappointed, Yi, Shi.
The simplified Chinese character Dong has appeared a long time ago. It is a kind of vulgar Chinese character. I think it should be simplified for easy writing. Moreover, the first two are both in traditional Chinese, so they should be written in two different ways.