The five elements of fir belong to wood.
Generally refers to trees, flowers and plants, such as fir pendants, which are resistant to decay. The finger is light and fragrant. The word "cedar" is used in the name to imply the charming fragrance, exquisiteness, smallness and strength, and it also means auspiciousness and connotation. The fir tree is an evergreen tree, up to 30 meters high, with a tower-like crown, long lanceolate leaves, unisexual flowers, and spherical fruits. The wood is white, light, and fragrant, and is used for construction and making appliances.
The five-element attribute of fir is wood. According to the principle that wood overcomes earth, it is taboo to name fir with the five-element element of earth. It is taboo to name the character for fir with a character that has the same rhyme rhyme or the same tone as yinping. This will make it difficult to read and have no sense of rhythm. It is taboo to name the person with the same character as the character for cedar. If the ancestor's name contains the character for cedar, it is taboo for the younger generation to be named with the character for cedar.
Other explanations:
Ode: The fir wood used to be nowhere to be found in the state, but now it can be found in many deep mountains in central and southern China. The wood is pine and straight, with leaves attached to branches, like thorns. Guo Pu's annotation of Erya says: Like a pine tree, it was born in the south of the Yangtze River. It can be used as pillars for ships and coffins to be buried without decay. It is also often used as barrel staves and is very water-resistant.
Zong said: The trunk of the fir is straight, roughly like a pine. It does not wither in winter, but its leaves are broad and form branches. Nowadays, it is found everywhere. When used as medicine, it is necessary to use Chinese yew tree and its smelly ones.
Shi Zhen said: The fir leaves are hard, slightly flat like thorns, and as strong as maple. People in the south of the Yangtze River took branches and planted seeds before and after the awakening of insects. When they left the Japanese country, they called them dry. Those with markings like those of a pheasant are called pheasant spots, and are particularly expensive to make coffins. Its wood does not bear termites, and its ashes produce the most gunpowder.