Candareen
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A candareen (Traditional Chinese: 分; pinyin: fēn) is a Western term for a traditional measurement of weight in East Asia. The Mandarin Chinese word fēn or Cantonese fan[1] is the original Chinese word for what is called a candareen It is equal to 10 cash and is 1/10 of a mace. It is approximately 378 milligrams. A troy candareen is approximately 374 milligrams.
In Hong Kong, one candareen is 0.3779936375 gramme[1] and in ordinance 22 of 1884, it is 2⁄150 oz. avoir.
The candareen was also formerly used to describe a unit of currency in imperial China equal to 10 li (釐) and is 1/10 of a mace. The Mandarin Chinese word fēn is currently used to denote 1/100th of a Chinese yuan (Renminbi) but the term candareen is now obsolete.
[edit] References
- ^ a b Weights and Measures Ordinance. The Law of Hong Kong.
[edit] See also
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Overview | Chinese currency |
Ancient and medieval | Knife money · Flying cash · Jiaozi · Huizi |
Near modern | Wen · Candareen (fēn) · Mace (qián) · Tael (liǎng) |
Republic of China | Yuan · Customs gold unit · OT$ (yuan) · NT$ (yuan) |
Renminbi series | 1st · 2nd · 3rd · 4th · 5th |
Special administrative regions | Hong Kong dollar · Macanese pataca |