China Naming Network - Eight-character Q&A - In ancient times, there were 360 lines saying that a scholar was the best. What are those 360 lines?

In ancient times, there were 360 lines saying that a scholar was the best. What are those 360 lines?

As the saying goes, "360 lines are the best", which means that people should do their best to do their jobs well in any job, and each job will have their own outstanding talents. Now bosses often use it to motivate their employees. However, this 360 line is just an imaginary number, which is used to refer to all walks of life.

Generally speaking, it can be divided into the following eleven industries: agriculture, forestry, animal husbandry, catering industry, clothing industry, handicraft industry (including masons, carpenters, etc. ), transportation, health care, culture and education, entertainment, service, art and other industries.

1. Agriculture, forestry and animal husbandry: including planting fields, cutting rice, planting corn, planting sweet potatoes, planting onions, flower farmers and selling flowers (such as Clivia, Nandina domestica and potted plants). ), sericulture, mulberry leaf picking, beekeeping, honey making, pig raising, cattle and sheep raising, chicken raising, selling all kinds of meat, horse herding, hunters and butchers.

2. Catering industry: including all kinds of vendors who sell steamed buns, steamed buns, golden cakes, rice cakes, sugar porridge, steamed cakes with steamed buns, baked cakes in the oven, tuckahoe cakes, spring rolls, sesame seeds and wonton for breakfast. Jiaozi, Dandan Noodles, cold noodles, Daoxiao Noodles, rice noodles crossing the bridge, Yuanxiao, eight-treasure rice, zongzi, fried rice and other staple foods are also sold. As well as rice sold in rice shops and various raw materials in vegetable markets (such as Flammulina velutipes, wild vegetables, peanuts, ham and various vegetables). There are also various restaurants and fruit stalls (such as watermelons, grapes, cantaloupes, bananas, apples, etc. ), all kinds of wines and drinks (such as beer, white wine, red wine, koumiss, milk). ? 3. Clothing industry: including cotton ginning, spinning, printing, batik printing, dyeing, bleaching, silk reeling, brocade, Sichuan brocade, silk and satin shops, embroidery, selling wool, tailoring, shoe stores, foot cloth, shoemakers, parasol repair, sandals, socks and hats. ? 4. Handicraft industry: including carpenters, lathe workers, sculptors, bricklayers, masons, gardeners, well repairers, door vendors, coal miners, charcoal burners, charcoal shops, lamp shops, candle shops, chopsticks workers, screen workers, cotton players, rouge workers, bell repairers, blacksmiths, coppersmith workers, umbrella makers and hairdressers.

5. Transportation industry: including sedan chairs, rickshaws, postmen, porters, car builders, road builders, ferrymen, porters, shipbuilders, lighthouses, etc. ? 6. Medical and health services: including doctors, cupping, tooth extraction, face wringing, midwives, herbal medicine stalls, selling snake wine, rat poison, sachets, haircuts, selling chamber pot, dung beetles, bathhouses, etc.

7. Culture and education: including teachers, school-running, booksellers, newspapers, photo studios, bookbinding, papermaking, brush, inkstone, ink, abacus, letter writing, Spring Festival couplets, tablets and poets.

8. Entertainment industry: including selling badminton, hoop, fireworks, chess, mahjong tiles, raising birds, fighting cocks, crickets, monkey show, circus, juggling, selling martial arts, lion dance, dragon dance, playing flower drums, walking on stilts, drummers, singers, dancers, cross talk and storytelling.

9. Service industries: such as shopkeepers, maids, women, eunuchs, very young men, page attendants, waiters, etc.

10. Art industry: including printing spring paintings, finger paintings, portrait paintings, selling moon cards, cast iron paintings, mounting paintings, painting snuff bottles inside, making dough sculptures, making opera masks, blowing sugar, ceramics workers, selling tri-color paintings of the Tang Dynasty, porcelain carvings, wood carvings, brick carvings, stone carvings, jade carvings, ivory carvings, paper-cut flowers, etc.

1 1. Other industries: including accounting, coinage, money houses, pawn shops, rag collectors, wet nurses, matchmakers, beggars, funeral services, coffin shops, fortune-telling, storytelling, thieves, robbers, bodyguards, executioners, jailers, etc.