Longevity: long life: old age. Blessed are you who live a long life.
Beauty grows old: youthful appearance disappears unconsciously. Metaphor age, appearance aging.
Widowed woman: an older widowed man who has never married a wife; Disgruntled wife: an older unmarried woman. Refers to older unmarried men and women.
Time flies: time flies: out of date. I'm too old.
Over 70 years old.
Over 60 years old: 60 years is a cycle and consists of heavenly stems and earthly branches, each representing one year. People over 60.
Length of a day: length: old. A self-deprecating statement of being old or qualified.
Know the age of life: the age when you know your destiny. Refers to 50 years old.
Old age
Mo Audie
People in their eighties and nineties. Sound "Mao" and sound "overlapping". People in their eighties refer to very old people.
The language is "Nine Songs of Han Caodui": "We can all die, and the favor extends to plants and insects."
Interpretation of Idioms in Gao De Nian
Pinyin: nián gāo dér
Interpretation: Old people have a sense of security and good morality. Shao, also known as "Bang" and "Shao", is beautiful.
old age
Pinyin: chum zh nián
Explanation: vertical: yes, soon; Dusk: Dusk, old age. Near old age.
Source: Song Ganyuan's "Lu Chuan Ci Drunk": "The years are still early."
The Year of the Flower _ Explanation of Idioms
Pinyin: nián dēng huā jiǎ
Interpretation: Hua Jia: The chronology indicates 60 years old with dry branches. I am sixty years old.
Old age has virtue _ idiom explanation
Pinyin: nián gāo yǒu dé
Interpretation: Good morality in old age.
Source: Wu Mingcheng's En Journey to the West 18: "I just want a virtuous child of a few years old to sit and talk with my master."
The Year of the Flower _ Idiom Interpretation
Pinyin: hu ā ji m: zh and niá n
Interpretation: Hua Jia: In the old days, heavenly stems and earthly branches was regarded as the Gregorian calendar year, and sixty years was regarded as a Hua Jia, also known as Jia Zi. Flowers: describe the intricacies of branch names. Refers to sixty years old.
Broken melon era
Pinyin: pògunán jì
Explanation: break: split. The word melon can be divided into two characters, which refers to when a girl is sixteen.
Source: Hao's "Vulgar Woman": "According to the custom, the woman is broken into a melon, not also. The word melon is broken into two or eight words, and it is said that it is two or eight years old. "
At the turn of the century _ idiom explanation
Pinyin: jēqún zhēJiāo
Interpretation: Ji, Qun: First name, Chen Ji is Chen Qun's father. Metaphor is a lifelong friendship.
Source: Biography of Three Kingdoms Shu Wei Chen Qun: "Kong Rong, the state of Lu, is arrogant. During his years between disciplines and groups, he made friends with Ji first and then with groups, and became famous all over the world. "