The use of capital figures began in the Ming Dynasty. Zhu Yuanzhang issued a decree because of the corruption case "Guo Huan case", which clearly required that the number of bookkeeping be changed from "one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, ten, one hundred thousand" to "one, two, three, four, five, seven, eight, nine, ten, ten, five, five.
The capitalization rules of Chinese characters in the extended data from 1 to 10 are as follows:
1. In Chinese, the number of money is in yuan. After yuan, you should write "whole" (or "positive"), and after corner, you don't have to write "whole" (or "positive"). There is a "minute" in the number, and the word "whole" (or "positive") is not written after the "minute".
Two, Chinese amount in words numbers should be marked with the word "RMB", amount in words numbers have "fen", and the word "whole" (or "positive") is not written after "fen".
Three, Chinese amount in words number should be marked with the word "RMB", amount in words number should be followed by the word "RMB" to fill in, can not leave a space. If "RMB" is not printed before the number of amount in words, the word "RMB" should be added. The fixed words "thousand, hundred, ten thousand, thousand, hundred, ten thousand, ten thousand, yuan, jiao and fen" shall not be pre-printed in the "amount in words" column of bills and settlement vouchers.
4. When there is "0" in Arabic numerals, Chinese capitalization shall conform to the Chinese language rules, the composition of the amount figures and the requirements for preventing alteration.
Five, the document has ten thousand yuan, one hundred million yuan and other units agreed, such as? 53,365,438+0.2 million yuan, with Wu Bai writing 331 million yuan.
References:
Baidu Encyclopedia-Capital Numbers