China Naming Network - Weather knowledge - What does Fishnet Grand Leaves mean?

What does Fishnet Grand Leaves mean?

Fishnet Grand Leaves means you don't get what you want.

Fishnet Grand Leaves, China idiom, Pinyin is yú wǎng hóng lí, which means that what you get is not what you want. From The Book of Songs Peak Xintai. Hong: Hongyan; Leave: suffer. Catch a swan goose by fishing with a net. Metaphor is not what you want. Idiom usage: as an object, attributive, meaning disappointment.

Fish is the oldest vertebrate. It is easy to accumulate heavy metals. Some hybrid offspring with different chromosome numbers still have fertility. They inhabit almost all aquatic environments on earth, from freshwater lakes and rivers to saltwater oceans.

Net (pinyin: w m 4 ng) is a first-class universal Chinese character. This word first appeared in Shang Dynasty Oracle Bone Inscriptions and Shang Dynasty inscriptions, and its ancient font is like a net. Hong (pinyin: hóng) is a kind of word (commonly used word) in the General Standard of Chinese. This word first appeared in seal script. Pictophonetic characters, the original meaning refers to geese, and later extended to "letters" and "big".

Fishnet Grand Leaves's name means.

Idioms in Fishnet Grand Leaves are generally named after the words "fish", "net" and "red", meaning prosperity, prosperity and prosperity. They can be named Mu Hong, Hongyi and Mi Hong. The following are the beautiful names of Fishnet Grand Leaves idioms. It is more appropriate and auspicious to name them by combining surnames, gender and birth time.