China Naming Network - Ziwei Dou Shu - Jiaxiang fortune-telling exposure _ Jiaxiang fortune-telling exposure event

Jiaxiang fortune-telling exposure _ Jiaxiang fortune-telling exposure event

What does the iron cock mean?

Question 1: What does a miser mean? He is very stingy, saying that he is very picky.

Question 2: What does the iron cock mean? The word Iron Rooster comes from the two-part allegorical saying Iron Rooster-penniless. Usually describes an extremely stingy person. Q: What is the strongest thing in the world? Confucius said: iron cock, bronze crane, glass mouse, glazed cat. What are these four treasures?

Question 3: What does the Peking Opera "The Iron Rooster" mean? You mean CCTV112011Feng Xiangxi's The Iron Rooster!

Xiang Rong, governor of the two rivers in the Qing Dynasty, led the Qing army to conquer the Taiping Army. After repeated battles and defeats, the Taiping Army sent Zhang Jiaxiang to surrender. He was used to force Zhang Jiaxiang to surrender to the Qing Dynasty, and was adopted as an adopted son and renamed Zhang. After General Taiping pretended that the miser was killed by Xiang Rong, he and his brother Tie Jinyi decided to cheat the court in Liyang and asked Xiang Rong to surrender to the camp with the intention of injury. Xiang Rong hesitated, and decided to take Zhang Jiaxiang as the groom to secretly protect and venture across the camp. Xiang Rong was really caught, but he was saved by Zhang Jiaxiang and finally escaped.

The reason why this drama is called "sixty-six iron cocks" is that six groups of actors who play Xiang Rong and Zhang Jiaxiang have appeared in the same drama one after another, and they are titled "sixty-six" to show good luck. They performed in the form of a contest ring, and the martial arts elites showed their magical powers. At the end of the year, they sealed the box to reward the audience.

Question 4: What does a miser mean? He is very stingy and says he is very picky.

Question 5: What does "Iron Rooster" mean? Refers to a person who has no money.

Question 6: What does the iron cock mean? The miser is a stingy person.

Introduction to the Iron Rooster: The word Iron Rooster comes from the two-part allegorical saying "Iron Rooster-No Money". Usually describes an extremely stingy person. Q: "What is the strongest thing in the world?" Confucius said, "Iron rooster, bronze crane, glass mouse, glass cat. What are these four treasures?

Two-part allegorical saying: "A miser-penniless". It is a well-known two-part allegorical saying, which is synonymous with extreme meanness. It is difficult to verify the origin of The Iron Rooster, but Yuan Mei's The Iron Rooster, Volume 22 of Woods in Qing Dynasty, is unforgettable. A rich man in Jinan is "stingy by nature, nicknamed' Iron Rooster' and says nothing". He wants to marry a concubine on the condition of "cheap price and beautiful appearance" Not long after, the matchmaker brought a woman, "no money, enough food and clothing." Unexpectedly, six months later, the rich man "opened his hidden things, which were empty." It turned out that the woman was an old tenant of his family, and the rich man drove them away because they were "too expensive". Later, she retaliated by stealing all his money and plucking all his feathers.

Question 7: What does the iron cock mean? It means that it is called the iron rooster.

Question 8: What does a miser mean? The miser is penniless.

It means penniless: not even a hair. Yang Zhu's extreme egoism. After describing people as very stingy and selfish.

From Mencius? Dedicated to ":"Andy took it for me, pulling a dime to benefit the world, not for me. "

Idiom pronunciation: Mao, can not be pronounced "O".

The idiom distinguishes the shape: pull, you can't write "dial"

Synonym: haggle over every ounce, haggle over every ounce, and love money like life.

Antonym: spend a lot of money, spend money like water.

Question 9: What does the fortune teller mean when he says that a miser is stingy, stingy and obsessed with money?