1, an onion grows after winter, and an old field grows.
After winter, one kind of onion grows and the other kind grows.
2, the sunset is carmine, either rain or wind.
Sunset carmine, rain or wind.
3. Arrive in June, sell quilts and buy grey materials.
June came, selling quilts and buying ashes.
4, the thunderstorm is small, and the thunderstorm is big.
A small thunderstorm, a heavy thunderstorm.
5. ice breaks wheat roots and pulls ropes.
Ice breaks the wheat roots and pulls the grinding rope.
Proverbs about seasons:
1, the rice sticks to the bowl, there are cirrus clouds on the mountainside, and the weather is fine. ?
2, Chongyang has no rain to see thirteen, thirteen has no rain and one winter is dry. ?
The dew is heavy and the weather is fine.
The hot weather makes people dizzy, which means that people are too lazy to move, even if the food is current, they are not moved.
5. Proverbs describing autumn.
6. I haven't eaten jiaozi in May, and I don't want to let go after I have broken my fur. ?
Heavy snow indicates a bumper harvest year, and it won't snow. ?
8, summer solstice mans, scorpions (mango) fall. ?
9. Before and after the Mid-Autumn Festival, it is white dew, and cotton and sweet potatoes will be harvested. ?
10, pave the field before the vernal equinox, and plant the beans after the vernal equinox.
The origin of proverbs:
Proverbs are commonly used fixed sentences handed down by people orally, which reflect profound truth in simple and popular language. Proverbs are artistic sentences created by folk collectives, passed down from mouth to mouth, concise and relatively stereotyped, and they are a regular summary of people's rich wisdom and universal experience. Proper use of proverbs can make the language lively and interesting and enhance the expressive force of the article.
Proverbs are widely spread in folk spoken language, expressing people's rich social life experience and shining with people's wisdom. Proverbs are not only the crystallization of our Chinese nation, but also widely used abroad. Proverbs reflect all aspects of social life.