Pinyin: ji ā ng gu í y ú x: n
Explanation: Ginger: Ginger; Cinnamon: cinnamon; Xin: Spicy. The spicy taste of ginger and cinnamon when they grow up. Metaphor means that the older a person is, the stronger he is.
Source: Biography of Yan Dun in Song Dynasty: "My ginger and cinnamon are getting older and hotter."
2.? The older you get, the worse it is.
Pinyin: Jiāng gu? zh? xing
Explanation: The longer ginger and cinnamon are, the hotter they are. The older you get, the more honest and frank you are.
Source: Biography of Yan Dun in Song Dynasty: "My ginger and cinnamon are getting older and hotter."
3.? If you want to be rich, don't forget the basics, don't be comfortable.
Pinyin: j ng Jiāng yóu j
Explanation: Do not forget the roots, do not seek comfort as the standard of wealth.
Source: According to "Under Mandarin and Lu Language", during the Spring and Autumn Period, Wenbo was a native of Lu, and his mother respected Jiang Youfang endlessly. She asked him, respecting Jiang very much: "Now I am widowed, and I am in the next position. I am afraid of forgetting my ancestors' work and being lazy. Why should I avoid it? "
4. Family ties are important.
Pinyin: qíng zhòng jiāng gōng g not ng
Explanation: This is a metaphor for brotherhood.
Source: Biography of Jiang Arm in the Later Han Dynasty: "Arm and his second brother Zhong Hai are both filial. Their friendship is endless, and they often lie together. If a wife and brother fall in love, they can't help but keep it. When they are heirs, they should be handed over to the house. "
5. Idiot mouse drags ginger
Pinyin: ch and sh ǔ tu not ji ā ng
Explanation: delusion: ignorance; Drag: pull. Metaphor is that people are not smart and ask for trouble.
Source: Qing Wenkang's Biography of Heroes of Children 22: "According to the statement, it is called' selling pots to find'; In a word, it is called' stupid rats drag ginger, and spring silkworms tie themselves'! "