China Naming Network - Fortune telling knowledge - What does purple gas from the east mean?
What does purple gas from the east mean?
Purple gas comes from the east, and the idiom is pronounced as: z ǐ q ǐ d ǐ ng lá i.
It is said that before Lao Tzu passed Hangu Pass, Guan Yinxi saw purple gas coming from the east and knew that saints would pass by. Sure enough, I came riding a green cow. This old metaphor is a symbol of good luck.
The idiom comes from Han Liuxiang's Biography of Youxian: "I went west and saw the purple floating customs in the shade, but I rode a green cow."
Synonyms are: colorful, solid color and purple, purple and yellow.
The antonym is: ominous.
Idiom sentence-making: He has experienced many misfortunes for decades, and now he is only operating the purple gas from the East once.