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Fortune-telling Tianya _ Fortune-telling Tianya Free Reading

What are the four-character idioms at the beginning of Liuzi?

Colorful, lingering, displaced, gossip, wandering, immortal, bloody floating mountains, bloody floating mountains, wandering to the end of the world, wandering abroad, bleeding floating bodies, spreading through the ages, the charm of the wind, flowing through the sky, returning the wind to snow, flowing through the scenery, flowing through the canal, flowing through the waves to send hope, flowing through the water heartlessly, flowing through the customs.

I. Displacement

Interpretation: displacement: spreading the disciples. Nowhere to live, wandering around.

From: The Book of History by Xue Hanguangde, a class of historians in the Eastern Han Dynasty: "I saw that Kanto was extremely sleepy and the people were displaced."

I secretly found that Kanto was particularly poor, and the people had nowhere to live and wandered around.

Second, exile

Explanation: Forced to drift away from home.

Said by: Puji's "Five Lights Meeting Yuan" Volume 56: "Abandon your father and run away, bumping into the east and west. Alas, Amitabha. "

My father left his hometown, drifted in other places, hit a wall everywhere, and life was particularly difficult. I hope the Buddha will bless me.

Third, the water is ruthless.

Explanation: the running water is gone forever, and there is no affection. Metaphor time goes by, no intention to stay.

From: Tang Juyi's Guo Yuan Jia Lu Xin Zhai: "Falling flowers are empty words, and running water enters the pool mercilessly."

Flowers fall silently from the trees, but water still flows into the pool mercilessly.

Fourth, meteors drive the moon [liú x and ng g m: n yuè]

Explanation: Like a meteor chasing the moon. Describe quick action.

Said by: Wu Ming, courtesy of The Journey to the West: "That meal was like a meteor chasing the moon, and the wind swept away the clouds."

The meal was eaten quickly, like the wind blowing away the clouds until the plate was as bright as light.

Verb (abbreviation of verb) bleeding corpse [lixuè pi ā o sh:]

Description: Describe the heavy casualties.

From: Han Yuankang's "The Dream of Wu Ji Wang Zhanmeng": "Wu waded in the river and shed countless people's blood."

Soldiers of the State of Wu crossed the river, and the blood on the river was dyed red because too many people died. There are too many bodies floating on it to count.