What does July filariasis mean?
July filariasis is an idiom in China, which comes from the Book of Songs, national style and wind. July filariasis, September clothes. On the first day, Li Lie was born the next day; No clothes, no brown, why did you die? The real meaning of filariasis in July is that the weather turns cold in July of the lunar calendar. As soon as it gets dark, you can see the big Mars falling from the west. However, July filariasis has been wrongly used to describe the summer heat for many years, and it still exists in various media, so the original meaning of this old saying has been popularized and alienated.
Filariasis in July is used to describe the hot weather in July in midsummer. In fact, it is wrong to read literature rationally. July filariasis doesn't mean it is hot.
Literally, July filariasis seems to refer to the hot temperature in midsummer, but its original intention is just the opposite. Fire flows out of the Book of Songs in July. The first verse is: Fire flows in July, and clothes are given in September. The first day I was fat, the next day I was fierce. No clothes, no brown, why die? On the third and fourth day, I stood on tiptoe. With my daughter-in-law, we are very happy to see each other in the south. This poem, expressed in modern Chinese, is: in July, the fire falls to the west, and in September, women sew cold clothes. 1 1 the north wind blows hard in the month,1the cold wind blows hard in February. How can we spend the end of the year without good clothes and coarse clothes? In the first month, we began to hoe and plow, and in the second month, we went to farm. Tianguan was very happy, took his wife and children and sent the rice to the sunny land.
This poem is about the work and life of a feudal official (bρn) who was under the command of Zhou Wang all the year round (the official land was in Xunyi and Binxian, Shaanxi) more than 3,000 years ago. Gong Liu, Zhou's ancestor, moved here from this fief. After Gong Liu's death, his son succeeded to the throne, and his capital was Qingjie.
This poem describes the life and labor of rural farmers all year round. The whole poem was written in July, and each painting was unfolded month by month in the order of farming activities. The weekly calendar is used in the poem. The first month of the week calendar is 1 1 month in the summer calendar (today's lunar calendar), and July is roughly equivalent to September and1month in the Gregorian calendar.
The fire here is not the weather like fire, but the name of a star. Fire refers to Mars, which the ancients in China called Antares. Flow in the west. Every year in late summer and early autumn, the position of Mars will gradually drop to the west of the night sky. So filariasis in July does not mean that the weather in July is as hot as filariasis, but it is getting colder and colder.
Another "Three Years of Zuo Zhao": Both cold and heat in the fire are retreating, that is to say, when the big Mars (Antares) appears in the south in the morning, the cold will retreat, and when the big Mars appears in the south at night, the heat will retreat. Accordingly, some contemporary people translate the fire in July and the clothes in September into the westward journey of Mars in July and the cold clothes made by women in September. In short, I went to Qiu Lai in summer and it got cold.