Are several shells quantifiers?

be

Method, commonly used Chinese characters? [ 1]? , pronounced as fā or à, was first seen in Oracle Bone Inscriptions? [2]? Its original meaning is radiation, that is, Shuo Wen Jie Zi: "hair, shoot hair." Also, "Shuo Wen Kuaibu": "Hair, root also." The original meaning also refers to hair. Later it was extended to the meaning of growth, occurrence, transmission, expression and development.

"Fa" is simplified from the words "Fa" and "Qi".

"Fa" means knowing the meaning of Chinese characters. In the figure (A 1), there are two "stops" (that is, the foot type), and the two "stops" mean that the feet are juxtaposed forward. This is a sign that Oracle Bone Inscriptions and Jin Liwen show that objects move up or forward quickly. Figure A shows Oracle Bone Inscriptions, throwing a weapon similar to a dart pole forward with his "hand". It means "release" and "throw". Figure B shows the bronze inscriptions at the end of Shang Dynasty and the beginning of Zhou Dynasty, which changed greatly. The front two feet have been twisted into the figure (B 1), and the lower "hand" and "dart bar" have become the "bow" in the figure (B2) and the "arrow" (i.e. arrow) in the figure (B3). The meaning of the word "Fa" has not changed, but in Oracle Bone Inscriptions, the weapons used for hair are the original sticks and darts, while the weapons used in inscriptions on bronze have become "bows" and "arrows". The word "Fa" in Figure C has developed to the seal period, and the prefix is still a sign that the feet move forward, but the word "Ya" in Figure C has been mistakenly changed to "Yes" in Figure C 1. After that, the word "Fa" was based on the small seal script, and further developed into the official script of Figure D and the regular script of Figure E. During the Jin and Tang Dynasties, cursive script rose, and many calligraphers wrote "Fa" as the cursive script of Figure F. Today (Figure G), the word "Fa" is a simplified character after the cursive script was opened.