Examples of ancient prose or poetry containing the word "yi" and "te":
1. Yi, an adjective, the original meaning is: tranquility. For example:
The heart is filled with joy. ——"Zuo Zhuan: The Twenty-First Year of Duke Zhao"
I, Yu Gu, have hundreds of millions of ghosts and gods. ——"Zuo Zhuan: The Thirty Years of Zhaogong"
It is extended to extremely many; extremely large. For example: According to the city of billions of meters. ——Han Jia Yi's "On the Passage of Qin"
One hundred million can also be used as a numeral, for example: 30 billion. ——"Poetry Wei Feng Cutting Sandalwood"
Billions of mourning shells. ——"Yi Zhen". Zheng's note: "One hundred thousand means one hundred million."
That's nine billion acres of land. ——"Book of Rites·Kingdom"
2. Te, an adjective, means unique and special. For example:
A scholar's unique behavior is only suitable for righteousness. ——Han Yu's "Ode to Boyi"
How come it has no special qualities? ——"Zhuangzi·Equality of Things"
Then you know that this is the uniqueness of the mountain, and it is not similar to Peiyuan. . ——Liu Zongyuan's "Shide Xishan Banquet Travel Notes"
Te can also be used as an adverb, meaning alone, single, and specially. For example:
How can my husband’s country be a chariot? - "Lu Shi Chun Qiu·Jun Shou"
How can it be a palace? - "Lu Shi Chun Qiu·Separation of Duties"
I specially follow the Three Kingdoms City. ——"Warring States Policy·Qin Policy Four"
Instruct Han Xin to attack the north. ——"Book of Han·Zhang Liang Biography"
But Peng Zu has heard about it for a long time now.
——"Zhuangzi·Xiaoyaoyou"