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Flying book lottery ticket

The letter in the book

Letters are generally called letters or letters in modern times and "books" in ancient times. The ancient "letter" refers to the messenger, that is, the person who delivers the letter, and the book is the letter. Therefore, there are more nicknames than letters composed of the word "book".

Jainca people in Cambodia

Bamboo slips refer to the writing materials from the Warring States Period to the Wei and Jin Dynasties, which are long and narrow bamboo slips or woodcuts. Bamboo is called Jane, and wood is called letters or bamboo slips, which are collectively called Jane. These are all used as titles for letters. Although the later written materials have changed, these titles are still used, such as Liu Zongyuan's "Reply to Gong Shiyuan and Gong Jin's Official Letter": "Shame leads to simplicity and gives it endless."

In addition, there are letters, letters, bamboo slips, letters, bamboo slips, letters and bamboo slips, stickers, handwritten books, notes, calligraphy.

Similar to Jane, Sue and Jane are both writing materials. Sue is a kind of white raw silk, which was used by the ancients to write things, so it became synonymous with books and letters.

Words with different names in letters have ruler sounds in addition to commonly used words such as books and Jane. Such as ruler book, ruler, ruler slip, red slip, ruler one, ruler one book, ruler Han, ruler note, ruler letter, ruler element, ruler silk, ruler paper and ruler

In ancient times, it was thought that both fish and geese could send letters, so fish and geese became pronouns of letters, which were a thriving family of letters.

Yanzushu

According to Su Hanwu Biography, during the reign of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty, Su Wu was detained when he went to Xiongnu, and Su Wu was brave and unyielding, and was sent to the North Sea (that is, Lake Baikal in Russia) to shepherd sheep. During the reign of Emperor Zhao of the Han Dynasty, the Huns fell in love with the Han Dynasty, and the envoys of the Han Dynasty demanded that they be returned to Su Wu. Xiongnu lied that Su Wu was dead. Later, the Han envoy went to Xiongnu, and Su Wu's entourage Chang Hui found the Han envoy in the evening. He asked the Han envoy to tell Hun Khan that Emperor Xian of Han had shot a wild goose in the forest garden, and the goose's foot was tied with silk, which said that Su Wu and others were in a river. According to this, the emissary blamed the Huns for Khan, but Khan was frightened. He quickly apologized and admitted that Su Wu and others were still there, but let Su Wu and others go back to North Korea. Later, it was called "Goose Foot Book" or "Goose Foot" letter. For example, Li Shen's poem in the Tang Dynasty said that "the fish intestines and geese hope to be sealed, and the land is far away and the mountains are heavy." Another example is the poem "Yi Dao" by the monks and Confucians in the Southern Liang Dynasty: "The size is in the fish intestines, and the heart depends on the goose's feet." Quan Deyu, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, once wrote a poem "Message to Li Hengzhou": "My Lord rode Ma Qianli to the East and only read Hengyang Gooseberry Book."