1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 0 | Ten | hundred | thousand | million | billion | Yuan |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
One | Two | three | 4 | five | Luk | Seven. | Eight | Nine | Zero | ten (10) | hundred | Thousand | million | billion | round |
Capitalisation of numbers began in the Ming Dynasty. Zhu Yuanzhang issued a decree because of a major embezzlement case at the time, the Guo Huan case, in which he explicitly required that the numbers in the bookkeeping must be changed from "1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 100, 1,000" to "1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 100, 1,000", Two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, ten, one hundred, one thousand" to "one, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, one hundred, one thousand" and other complex Chinese characters to increase the difficulty of altering the books. Later, the characters "陌" and "阡" were rewritten as "百、仟" and have been used until now.
Amounts | Capitalised Numbers | Numerical Amounts | Upper case numbers | Numeric Amounts | Upper case numbers | Numeric Amounts | Upper case numbers | Numeric Amounts | Upper case numbers |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | Zero yuan | 1 | One yuan | 2 | Two whole dollars | 3 | Three yuan | 4 | Four whole yuan |
5 | Five dollars | 6 | Six whole dollars | 7 | Seven dollars | 8 | Eight yuan | 9 | Nine yuan |
10 | One hundred yuan | 11 | One hundred and one yuan | 12 | One hundred and twenty two yuan | 13 | One hundred and thirteen yuan | 14 | One hundred and forty Yuan |
15 | One hundred and fifty dollars | 16 | One hundred and six yuan | 17 | One hundred and seventeen yuan | 18 | One hundred and eighteen yuan | 19 | One hundred and nineteen yuan |
20 | Two hundred yuan | 30 | Three hundred yuan | 40 | Four hundred yuan | 50 | Five hundred yuan | 60 | Sixty-fourths of a cent |
70 | Seven hundred yuan | 80 | Eight hundred yuan | 90 | Nine hundred yuan | 100 | One hundred yuan | 200 | Two hundred yuan |
300 | Three hundred yuan | 400 | Four hundred yuan | 500 | Five hundred yuan | 600 | Six hundred yuan | 700 | Seven hundred yuan |
800 | Eight hundred yuan | 900 | Nine hundred yuan | 1000 | One thousand yuan | 2000 | Two thousand yuan | 3000 | Three thousand yuan |
4000 | Four thousand yuan | 5000 | Five thousand yuan | 6000 | Sixty-fourths of a cent | 7000 | Seven thousand yuan | 8000 | Eight thousand yuan |
9000 | Nine thousand yuan | 10000 | Ten thousand yuan | 20000 | Twenty thousand yuan | 30000 | 30,000 Yuan | 40000 | RMB 40,000 |
50000 | 50,000 Yuan | 60000 | One hundred thousand yuan | 0.1 | Ten cents | 0.2 | 20 cents | 0.3 | Thirty cents |
0.4 | Four corners | 0.5 | 50 cents | 0.6 | Land | 0.7 | Seven cents | 0.8 | Eighty cents |
0.9 | Nine cents | 1.1 | One dollar and ten cents | 1.2 | One dollar and two cents | 1.3 | One dollar and thirty cents | 1.4 | One yuan, four cents |
1.5 | One dollar fifty cents | 1.6 | One yuan, ten cents | 1.7 | One dollar and seventy cents | 1.8 | One dollar eighty cents | 1.9 | One Yuan Nine Cents |
Note on the capitalisation of Renminbi
Chinese uppercase figures should be filled out in block letters or in running script, such as one (one), two (two), three, four (four), five (five), six, seven, eight, nine, ten, hundred, thousand, ten thousand (ten thousand), hundred million, hundred million, yuan, corner, minute, zero, whole (positive) and other characters. It shall not be filled in with one, two (two), three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, nian, mao, another (or 0), and shall not create its own simplified characters. If the amount of figures written in the use of traditional Chinese characters, such as II, Luk, billion, ten thousand, round, should also be accepted.
I. Chinese uppercase amount figures to "yuan" until the "yuan", after the "yuan", should write "whole" (or "positive") words, in the "corner" after the "whole" (or "positive") words can not be written. Upper case amount of money figures have "points", "points" is not written after the "whole" (or "positive") words.
Second, the Chinese uppercase amount of figures should be marked before the word "RMB", uppercase amount of figures with "points", "points" is not written after the "whole" (or "positive") words.
Third, the Chinese uppercase amount of figures should be marked before the word "RMB", uppercase amount of figures should be filled in immediately after the word "RMB", and shall not be left blank. If the word "RMB" is not printed in front of the capital amount figures, the word "RMB" should be added. In the bills and settlement vouchers in the capital amount column shall not be pre-printed fixed "thousand, hundred, ten thousand, thousand, hundred, ten, yuan, corner, cent" characters.
Fourth, lowercase Arabic numerals in the amount of figures have "0", the Chinese capitals should be written in accordance with the laws of the Chinese language, the amount of numerical composition and to prevent the alteration of the requirements. Examples are as follows:
1-arabic numerals in the middle of "0", the Chinese capitals should be written "zero" word, such as ¥ 1409.50, should be written as RMB 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000.
2-Arabic numerals in the middle of several consecutive "0", the Chinese capital amount can be written only in the middle of a "zero" word, such as ¥ 6007.14, should be written as RMB 6,000,070,070,010,010,010,010,010,010,010,010,010,010,010,010,010,010,011.
3-Arabic amount of digital ten thousand and yuan is "0", or a few consecutive figures in the middle of the "0", ten thousand, yuan is also "0", but thousands of bits, the corner is not "0", the Chinese capital amount can be written only a zero word, you can not write the word "zero". Such as ¥ 1680.32, should be written as CNY 1,680.32, or written as CNY 1,680.32, or written as CNY 1,680.32, and such as ¥ 107,000.53, should be written as CNY 1,000,700,000 yuan 0.533, or written as CNY 1,000,000 0.733 yuan 0.533.
4-Arabic amount of digital corner is "0", and the sub-position is not "0", the Chinese capital amount of "yuan" should be written after the word "zero". 如¥16409.02,应写成人民币壹万陆仟肆佰零玖元零贰分;又如¥325.04,应写成人民币叁佰贰拾伍元零肆分。
The Origin of Numbers
The first tools humans used to count were their fingers and toes, but they could only represent numbers up to 20. When there were many numbers, most primitive people used small stones to keep count. Gradually, people invented the method of tying knots to keep count, or carving on animal skins, trees or stones to keep count. In ancient China, small sticks made of wood, bamboo or bone were used to keep track of numbers, which were called counting chips. These counting methods and symbols were slowly transformed into the earliest numerical symbols (digits). Today, Arabic numerals are used as the standard in countries around the world.