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1234567890tenHundredthousandTen thousand100 millionYuan
onetwo3bornWulandSeveneightNinezeropickupBaithousandTen thousand100 millionround

Historical origins of Chinese digital capitalization

The capitalization of numbers began in the Ming Dynasty. Zhu Yuanzhang issued a law because of a major corruption case at that time, "Guo Huan Case", which clearly required the account number to be changed from "one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, hundreds, thousands" to "one, two, three, si, 5, Lu, seven, eight, nine, si, 5, 7, eight, nine, si, bai (mo), Qian (qian)" and other complex Chinese characters to increase the difficulty of modifying the account book. Later, "Mo" and "Qian" were rewritten as "Bai and Qian" and have been used until now.

Common figure capitalization

Digital amountCapsDigital amountCapsDigital amountCapsDigital amountCapsDigital amountCaps
0Zero yuan1One yuan2Two yuan3Three yuan4Siyuanzheng
5Wu Yuanzheng6Lu Yuanzheng7Qi Yuan8Eight yuan9Jiuyuan
10One-shot Yuan11One pick and one yuan12One shit and two yuan13One pick three yuan14Yishisiyuan
15One shining Wu Yuan16One Lu Yuanzheng17One pick seven yuan18One eight yuan19One-shot Jiuyuan
20Two yuan30Three-selected Yuan40Si Shiyuan50Wu Shiyuan60Lu Shiyuan
70Qi Shiyuan80Eight yuan90Jiushiyuan100One hundred yuan200Two hundred yuan
300Three hundred yuan400Sibai Yuan500Wu Baiyuan600Lu Baiyuan700Seven hundred yuan
800Eight hundred yuan900Jiubaiyuan1000One thousand yuan2000Two thousand yuan3000Three thousand yuan
4000Siqian Yuan50005,000 yuan6000Lu Qianyuan7000Seven thousand yuan8000Eight thousand yuan
9000Nine thousand yuan10000One thousand yuan2000020,000 yuan3000030,000 yuan4000010,000 yuan
50000Nine ten thousand yuan60000Lu Wanquan0.1One corner0.22jiao0.3Triangle
0.4Sijiao0.5Wu Jiao0.6Lujiao0.7Seven corner0.8Eight corner
0.9Jiujiao1.1One yuan and one cent1.2One yuan two cents1.3One dollar triangle1.4One Yuan Sijiao
1.5One Yuan Wujiao1.6One Yuan Lujiao1.7One Yuan Qi Ke1.8One yuan eight cents1.9One Yuan Jiujiao

Notes on capital figures of RMB
The Chinese capital amount number is filled in in regular script or running script, such as 1 (1), 2 (2), 3 (4), 5 (4), 5 (4), 7, 8, 9, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, 10, You must not use one, two (two), three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, pronounce, Mao, another (or 0), and you must not create simplified characters yourself. If traditional Chinese characters are used in writing the amount number, such as 2, Lu, Yi, Wan, and Yuan, it should also be accepted.

1. If the Chinese capital amount is up to "yuan", after "yuan", the word "whole" (or "right") should be written, and after "angle", the word "whole" (or "right") should be written. If the capital amount number has "score", the word "integrated" (or "right") will not be written after the "score".

2. The Chinese capital amount number should be marked with the word "RMB". If the capital amount number has "mini", the word "integrated" (or "positive") will not be written after the "mini".

3. The Chinese capital amount should be marked with the words "RMB" before the capital amount. The capital amount should be filled in immediately following the words "RMB" and no blanks should be left. If the capital amount is not printed in front of the capital amount, the three words "RMB" should be added. The words "Qian, Bai, Shi, Wan, Qian, Bai, Shi, Yuan, Jiao, and Fen" shall not be pre-printed in the capital amount column of bills and settlement vouchers.

4. When there is "0" in the lowercase amount of Arabic numerals, Chinese capital should be written in accordance with the Chinese language rules, amount numbers and requirements for preventing correction. As an example:
1. When there is "0" in the middle of the Arabic numeral, the Chinese capital letter should be written with the word "zero", such as ¥1409.50, it should be written as RMB 1,000,000,000,000,500.
2. When there are several "0" in the middle of the Arabic numerals, you can only write one "zero" in the middle of the Chinese capital amount. For example, ¥6007.14, it should be written as RMB 6007,070 yuan per cent.
3. When the Arabic amount digits and the yuan bits are "0", or there are several consecutive "0" in the middle of the number, and the ten thousand and yuan bits are also "0", but when the thousand and angle bits are not "0", you can only write one zero word in the Chinese capital amount, or you can not write the word "zero". For example, RMB 1680.32, it should be written as RMB 1,680.32, or RMB 1,680.2, or RMB 1,070.53, it should be written as RMB 1,700.05, or RMB 1,070.53, it should be written as RMB 1,700.05, or RMB 1,070.53, or RMB 1,070.53.
4. When the angle of the Arabic amount numeral is "0" and the quantile is not "0", the word "zero" should be written after the Chinese capital amount "yuan". For example, RMB 16409.02, it should be written as RMB 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000

Digital origin
The earliest tools used by humans to count were fingers and toes, but they could only represent numbers within 20. When the number is large, most primitive people use small stones to count. Gradually, people invented the method of tying knots to count, or carving counts on animal skins, trees, and stones. In ancient China, small sticks made of wood, bamboo or bones were used to count, which was called calculating chips. These counting methods and counting symbols are gradually transformed into the earliest numerical symbols (digitals). Today, countries around the world use Arabic numerals as standard numbers.

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