thumb|200px|Wang Mang's jialiang is now in the National Palace Museum, [[Taipei.]] thumb|Inscription Jialiang () is an ancient Chinese device for measuring several volume standards.
thumb|200px|Wang Mang's jialiang is now in the National Palace Museum, [[Taipei.]] thumb|Inscription Jialiang () is an ancient Chinese device for measuring several volume standards.
The term jialiang is mentioned in the Rites of Zhou. The passage describes the construction of one that includes three measures, fu (釜), dou (豆), and sheng (升); furthermore, the instrument weighs one jun (鈞) and its sound is the gong of huangzhong (黃鐘之宮). Known jialiang give standards for the five measures yue (龠), ge (合, equal to two yue), sheng (升, equal to ten he), dou (斗, equal to ten sheng), and hu (斛, equal to ten dou).
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).