It is the name of a delicious food in Xi 'an, and it is called "biang biang noodles". It is said that this word is actually a colloquial onomatopoeic word. And because the writing of this word is complicated, it can't be typed by computer, so it can only be replaced by its pinyin.
Chinese characters are the only characters in the ancient writing system that have been passed down to this day. Most of the strokes of Chinese characters are relatively simple, but some characters are really complicated and difficult to write. It is said that the word "biang" has related formula memories because it represents Xi 'an special cuisine.
The writing of biang characters is complicated, among which there are 56 paintings in traditional Chinese characters and 42 paintings in simplified Chinese characters. Because of its particularity, everyone uses the formula to remember. This formula is: A little flies to the sky, and the Yellow River bends on both sides.
The eight-character mouth is wide open, and the words go in, twisting left and right; The west is long, the east is long, and there is a horse king in the middle; At the bottom of the heart, next to the moon, leave a hook to hang hemp candy; Push the car into Xianyang.
Evolution of Chinese characters:
In China characters, various fonts formed in different historical periods have their own distinctive artistic features. For example, seal script is simple and elegant, official script is quiet and dynamic, rich in decoration, cursive script is fast, compact in structure, neat and beautiful in regular script, easy to read and write in running script, practical and diverse in style and personality.
However, before the Qin Dynasty unified Chinese characters, China's Chinese characters were still confused in terms of font and application. In a broad sense, ancient Chinese includes the characters before Xiao seal, including Da seal. In a narrow sense, it refers to the characters before Da Zhuan in the history of China characters. Here, the narrow concept of ancient prose is adopted. Ancient prose includes Oracle Bone Inscriptions and inscriptions on bronze; Among them, the former is regarded as the earliest stereotyped writing in China.
Oracle inscriptions: The characters left on tortoise shells and animal bones by writing or engraving in the late Shang Dynasty, most of which are Oracle inscriptions, and a few are notes. Most of Oracle Bone Inscriptions's characters conform to the principle of pictographic and knowing, and pictophonetic characters only account for 20%. Its characters are carved with a knife, some filled with cinnabar, and some directly written in ink.
Because Oracle Bone Inscriptions is mostly evolved from pictures and characters, it is highly pictographic, with multiple characters and uncertain strokes. This shows that China's writing was not unified in the Yin and Shang Dynasties.
Image inscriptions in the Yin Dynasty: In the pre-Qin period, copper was called gold, so the words cast on bronzes were called inscriptions, also known as Zhong Dingwen and Yi Qi. Compared with Oracle Bone Inscriptions, inscriptions on bronze inscriptions are more pictographic, showing the ancient characters. The solid writing style of the bronze inscription makes the image vivid and natural.
In the history of China's writing, in Xia, Shang and Zhou dynasties, the contribution to philology was the most important. Shi Cheng is a historian in Zhou Xuanwang, so he should not innovate in order to be simple. Da Zhuan is also known as Shu Wen, Shu Zhuan, Shu Shu and history books.
Because it was written by Shi Shu, it is known as Shu Wen in the world. Da Zhuan can be found in Shuo Wen Jie Zi and various Zhong Ding Yi wares collected by later generations. Among them, Zhou Xuanwang's Shi Guwen is the most famous.