The four-character idioms that are elegant, beautiful, and poetic include: Midsummer light years, tainted years, all the songs, beautiful people on the shore, graceful quicksand, vicissitudes of life, a picture of the world of mortals, thousands of generations, like smoke Ruomeng.
1. Midsummer light year shèng xià guāng nián
Interpretation: Midsummer, a seasonal term, is actually midsummer. In ancient times, they were divided into Meng, Zhong and Ji. The difference is one of those three months, which is the hottest time in summer. This is also the time when many fruits and vegetables are ripe. In midsummer, the weather is hot, and the elderly and children are prone to heatstroke. Therefore, you should eat scientifically to cool down and stay healthy in your daily life. "Light years" refers to this time and this age.
Example: It is light years in the middle of summer, and you and I have met each other.
2. Enzhi Nianhua rǎn zhǐ nián huá?
Interpretation: Time and years passing by like water. Bao Zhao's poem "Deng Yunyang Jiulidai" of the Southern Song Dynasty: "The old heart will never return, and the fleeting years are full of decline and illness." Huang Tao's poem "Fables" of the Tang Dynasty: "The fleeting years are fifty years ago, and the dynasty relies on the youth. Five fleeting years Ten years later, Haoshou is invaded every day. "The poem "Happiness in front of the Palace" by Zhang Kejiu of the Yuan Dynasty: "The flowers are falling in the year, and the good time of spring is gone." The first chapter of Su Manshu's "The Story of Broken Hong Lingyan": "From now on, I will sweep leaves and burn incense to send me a fleeting year, so there will be no regrets!"
In the old days, fortune tellers predicted a person's luck for the year. Song Dynasty Su Shi's "Ci Yun Zi Yu Dong Pavilion": "You can build things everywhere, and you can count the number of years in the passing years." "Awakening Words: Du Zichun's Three Visits to Chang'an": "I think my passing years are unfavorable, so I have no luck to enjoy it. , even like this. "Zhao Shuli" "Xiao Erhei's Marriage" 5: "Xiao Erhei has been smart since he was a child. He has been able to do things like calculating zodiac signs, fortune-telling, and reciting mantras such as "Jia Zi Yi Chou Hai Zhong Jin" and so on. I’m all familiar with it.”
3. Gē jìn qīng jun
Definition: After a song is sung, all the youthful years are entrusted to the one you love.
Example: Yu Ji on the stage sings and sings all her life.
4. Yi Ren Xi'an yī rén xī àn
Interpretation: Yi, the third person used for women in the past, is equivalent to the current "she". Yiren: That person (female). The person (woman) stood on the shore at sunset. Also used as an elliptical sentence and a mood word. Lamenting the passage of time, beautiful woman, beautiful woman on the sunset bank, almost evening. Beauty grows old. Or maybe the person in your heart is far away from you.
Example sentence: Seeing the beauty dying, but there is nothing to do.
5. Fenghua quicksand fēng huá liú shā?
Interpretation: Fenghua refers to the most beautiful time of age. Quicksand, simply put, is sand that can flow like a liquid, that is, flowable sand. It is a natural phenomenon. It often appears in deserts with unstable foundations. When heavy objects are placed on the sand, they sink to the bottom like sinking to the bottom. Here it means that the best years are like sand and can be easily lost.
6. Vicissitudes of life cāng sāng nián juàn
Interpretation: vicissitudes of life, from the Chinese idiom vicissitudes of life. The sea became a field of mulberry trees, and the fields of mulberry trees became a sea. It is a metaphor for the great changes in the natural world or the ever-changing world, and the impermanence of life; or it is a metaphor for the huge and rapid changes in the world - referred to as vicissitudes of life. The text of Ge Hong's "Biography of Immortals·Wang Yuan" of the Jin Dynasty: "Ma Gu said to herself: 'Since I took over the service, I have seen three mulberry fields in the East China Sea.'" The poem "Xian Eighth Uncle Returns to the East" by Chu Guangxi of the Tang Dynasty: "You can't be with others when you go alone. , the sea becomes a mulberry field. "Liu Ji of the Ming Dynasty "Cherish the Remaining Spring Slowness·Yong Zigui": "There are times when the sea is mulberry fields, and if the sea has not dried up, there will be no end to sorrow."?
Example: Life is still young, but. After experiencing ups and downs, I feel tired just thinking about it.
7. Red Dust Picture Scroll hóng chén huà juàn
Interpretation: Red Dust refers to the flying dust in the busy city, and refers to the bustling society's red dust. Buddhism refers to seeing through the red dust in the world. Hongchen is a common name. In ancient times, the original meaning of Hongchen was a prosperous city.
It comes from a poem in "Ode to the Western Capital" by Ban Gu, a writer and historian of the Eastern Han Dynasty. It refers to the bustling secular life in this world. It comes from the dust raised by horses and carriages on dirt roads in the past, and is a metaphor for the road to fame and wealth.
Example sentence: Looking back at the world of mortals, love and hate are all in it, and they are forgotten indifferently.
8. Qianqiu Jishi qiān qiū jǐ shì
Interpretation: Qianqiu refers to a thousand years, a long time, a birthday. Respectful speeches refer to people's birthdays. Today's ancestors are thousands of years old. If grandma is angry, won't it arouse people's discussion? - Cao Xueqin's "Dream of Red Mansions" Qianqiu refers to a thousand years of time. It takes a long time to describe. The words come from the old poem "With Su Wu" written by Li Ling of Han Dynasty: "It is difficult to meet again, but three years are the best." It laments how many rounds life can have.
Example: Even though the emperor has overwhelming power, he can last for thousands of lives.