The word "guy"
Inscription: Qing Gai is He Zhi Ju Yang.
"Tracing to the Source" page 56: "Gai comes from official script. The mature word "Gai" first appeared on the inscription of the Ming army in Xiang Jing, Beihai in the second year of Han 'an in the Eastern Han Dynasty (AD 143). "Gai" is more commonly used than "Gai" in Han and Wei inscriptions. "According to the bronze mirror of the Dragon and Tiger in the Eastern Han Dynasty, there are more than ten inscriptions on the mirror of the Dragon and Tiger in the Eastern Han Dynasty, all of which are' covers', not traditional. The legend of this book is earlier than that mentioned in Tracing the Source, and can be revised.
Sun "
Inscription: descendants of Changyi
"Tracing to the Source" on page 79: "'Sun' comes from cursive script. The history of the Western Han Dynasty was written by Sun Jizhang, and the bamboo slips in Dunhuang were written by Sun, which is basically the same as the simplified word Sun today. " The legends in this book are late and can be used as a supplement.
The word "for"
Inscription: Hand-woshi is a national treasure.
"Tracing to the Source" page 8 1: "Wei comes from cursive script. The word' Wei' has been widely used in Juyan bamboo slips and Dunhuang bamboo slips in the Han Dynasty. " The legend of this book is also a little late, which can be supplemented.
The word "ten thousand"
Inscription: Long life, long life.
"Tracing the Source" page 8 1: "The word' Wan' was first seen in the early Western Zhou Dynasty, and its meaning is unknown. There is a word' Wan' in the ancient seal of the Warring States Period, which is used as' Wan'. In Han and India, Han Monument and Wei Bei,' Wan' often writes' Wan'. " The inscription on the mirror shows that the content of "Long live the Millennium" was not simplified in the Western Han Dynasty, but began to appear in the Eastern Han Dynasty. Later, the four-character auspicious words "Long live the Millennium" in the Five Dynasties and Ten Countries all used the simplified word "Wan", which can be said to be inherited.
The word "Hou"
Inscription: Tell future generations that they are happy.
On page 59 of Tracing to the Source, Hou and Hou are originally two different words. Hou means monarch, such as "heaven behind the earth" and is also used for "queen"; "Hou" is the "Hou" before and after. However, the word "Hou" is often used as a cover in ancient books of pre-Qin. For example, The Book of Rites University:' Zhi Zhi will decide later.' Here "after" means "after". From the written materials unearthed from the tombs in the early years of the Western Han Dynasty, it can be seen that it was very common to use' Hou' instead of' Hou' from the end of the Warring States Period to the early years of the Western Han Dynasty. From pre-Qin dynasty to Han dynasty, this word was mostly simplified, and the content of this article can be supplemented. This word is used in Mawangdui silk script, Mukai stone que and other documents. In Qing Dynasty, Wang Shu, Wu Xizai, Yang Yisun, Wu Dacheng and others also had many applications.
The word "nothing" (original copy)
Related Inscription: Keep infinity with the sky.
Tracing back to the source page 8 1: "Wu first appeared in the Warring States period, and the odd characters (Warring States characters) in Shuowen and Wu in Sleeping Tiger Bamboo Slips are very close to today's simplified characters. The word' nothing' is widely used in Han steles. " The main pattern of this mirror is the God-beast rearrangement mirror, which was popular during the reign of Emperor Xian in the Eastern Han Dynasty. It can be used as an important supplement to simplified characters since ancient times. The simplified word "Wu" was used by Wu Xizhai and widely in Qing Dynasty.
The word "pro"
Inscription: Chang Bao's second parents gained the power of nature.
On page 74 of "Seeking Roots", "Qin" was first seen in Han Daozhao's "Four Tones Into the Sea" in the Jin Dynasty. There is also the word' pro' in the Yuan manuscript "Jing Ben Popular Novel". " This mirror was carved in Taiyuan in the second year of Sun Quan, the Emperor of the Three Kingdoms (AD 252). There is also the word "pro" in the animal mirror of Zhang Ming in the Eastern Han Dynasty unearthed in Hunan. Therefore, the simplified version of Qin appeared more than eight centuries earlier than the Jin Dynasty mentioned in Tracing the Source, and can be revised.
At the beginning of the 20th century, Lu Feikui, Qian, li jinxi, Hu and others initiated the writing of simplified characters. 1930, the Institute of History and Linguistics of Academia Sinica published the Book of Commonly Used Characters since Song and Yuan Dynasties edited by Liu Fu and Li Jiarui. 1932, the Ministry of Education of the National Government published the General Vocabulary of Chinese Phonetics compiled by the Preparatory Committee for Putonghua: "Now, it is necessary to implement (simplified characters) to make writing easier." Over the years, various works have also introduced simplified word lists and simplified word dictionaries. After the founding of New China, the State established the Chinese Character Reform Committee. After repeated discussions and decisions, the simplified characters used today were finally formed. 1964 published a summary of simplified characters, which included 2236 simplified characters.