Chinese characters are one of the most widely used characters in the world and one of the longest-lived characters, with a history of more than 4,000 years. It is difficult to determine the time when Chinese characters came into being.
The oldest characters we can see today are those carved in Oracle Bone Inscriptions and cast on bronzes in Shang Dynasty, which are called Oracle Bone Inscriptions and Jinwen.
The written language of Shang Dynasty has been very developed, and the earliest time of writing must be far before Shang Dynasty, that is, Xia Dynasty or earlier. About four or five thousand years ago.
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Bion
The word "biang" comes from the pasta biang noodles in Guanzhong area of Shaanxi Province. Biáng is a colloquial onomatopoeia, and sometimes it is a mantra or nursery rhyme. 56 strokes are the most difficult words to write.
Because biang biang is not a Chinese character, it belongs to figure painting. These words and paintings are created purely for some good wishes.
Other difficult Chinese characters:
Oops: y (missing teeth)
Yan: Yu (finished smoking)
Hun: c (same as "rough")
I: líng (dragon. Ancient "gods", gods)
Yan: Yu (Jun Gao)
Swimming: Da (Shuanglong)
Wrong: yuán (archaic "source")
Cook with fire
Luan: Luan (meaning Luan in ancient times).
Biāo (the way many horses run)
Diptera: sheep
uninterrupted
Holmium: men (that is, "red millet", a kind of millet)