Ask the master to give a 60-year-old birthday couplet, and it is best to embed its name "Zheng Hui" and explain it! Urgent need, thank you!
Interpretation: Jia Zi, sixty years, alludes to your father's age. Zhifang, a cluster of Ganoderma lucidum, is the place where Ganoderma lucidum is cultivated. A metaphor is that your father worked hard to raise his children and finally became a successful person. Another metaphor is that the old man has accomplished a lot in his half life. The couplets * * * give spring glow, which means that everyone will get together and celebrate the birthday of the old man. They also wish the elderly a bright future like Chunhui.
2. Hua Zheng Jia is older than Nan Shan Song, and the rising sun will always shine in peace and prosperity.
Interpretation: sixty years old. The meaning of this sentence is relatively straightforward, and I wish the elderly a long and youthful life.
Description: There are two kinds of traditional longevity couplets with embedded names: Tibetan head and Tibetan head and kotaro oshio body, and the ones with hidden names in the middle are rare. Your father's name can be embedded in orthography, and Huizi is a noun. If it is placed in the bottom couplet, it is not easy to find the right words to connect into the bottom couplet with catchy rhythm and easy-to-understand meaning, and it is even more impossible to distort the meaning of words, so the Tibetan-headed kotaro oshio-style embedding is adopted. The first couplet echoes from beginning to end and has a unique charm.