Two people destined to get married
from a thousand li away
[Interpretation] Marriage is formed when the old man secretly holds the feet of both men and women with red lines under the moon. For the story, see Tang's "Continued Mystery and Love Shop".
[Language] Cao Qingxue Qin's "Dream of Red Mansions" 57: "Since ancient times, there has been an old man in charge of marriage. It is destined to only use a red line to trip the feet of these two people. "
A thousand miles of marriage is a thread.
[Usage] Subject-predicate type; Make provisions; Marriage is destiny takes a hand.
The idiom "Er" describes marriage.
White head to old head: white hair. Husband and wife love each other forever.
Source: The Book of Songs Meng: Grow Old Together Cai Minglu's "Huai Ji Xiang Zhao Feng Ban Shi": "Son, I will grow old with your mother, and I will be rich."
Grow old together. Husband and wife love each other forever.
Source: Feng Ming Menglong's "Hanging Wooden Comb": "Wooden Comb, I love your clean teeth ... swear to the dresser: I wish you a white head!"
Being together means that husband and wife love each other forever.
Source: Xiao Xiaosheng, Ming Lanling, Jin Ping Mei Hua Ci 62: "Brother, I am willing to spend the rest of my life with you, but I know that I will die today."
A hundred years of harmony means that husband and wife are reconciled forever.
Source: "Pink House" The first time: "A hundred years of harmony, a thousand years of reunion congratulations!"
After a hundred years of harmony, the marriage is happy.
Source: Ming Lingmengchu's "Two Moments of Surprise" Volume 9: "I have been in harmony with your sister for a hundred years, and the burden of my daughter is only on these two! I hope that Sister Longxiang will try to be considerate and ask for answers. "
Grow old together for a hundred years: * * unchanged. Refers to the husband and wife * * * grow old together.
Source: Yuan Wuhan Chen's "Golden Pavilion" is the second discount: "The official's son gave me a big gift, I will marry you and hope to grow old together for a hundred years. You just refuse to follow it, but why? "
A century of harmonious aging means that husband and wife live together until they are old.
Source: "Quan Yuan Sanqu Ji Xianbin Soap Robe": "Full of affection, the original century of harmony, * * * leave a white head."
A hundred years of permanent harmony. A man and a woman are married.
Source: Song Ye Luo's "Zuiwengtan Zhang Lu Running at Night": "It is better to run with you now for a hundred years." Ming Lingmengchu's "Surprise at the First Moment" (Volume 32): "We are in our prime and have never been married. Those who don't give up will be with their children for a hundred years. "
A hundred years together: friendship. Permanent harmony. A man and a woman are married.
Source: Ming Tu Long's "A Short Story: A Scholar elopes with a Woman": "I also admire my talent, so I will make a hundred-year-old painting instead of just inviting a one-night stand."
Fly with me Qi Fei: fly with me. Qi Fei: Fly in pairs. Metaphor husband and wife congenial, advance side by side in career.
Source: "Erya Dish": "There are birds in the south, which is no better than not flying, so it is called."
Fly with me and compare wings: fly with me. Fly in pairs: fly in pairs. Metaphor husband and wife congenial, advance side by side in career.
Source: "Erya Dish": "There are birds in the south, which is no better than not flying, so it is called."
What idioms are there to describe fate?
Encounter [xiè hê u xiā ng yê] means to meet unintentionally. Meet: Meet without a date.
Unexpected meeting [bù qī rī yī] period: the agreed time; Internal encounter: meet each other late; Meet. Meet unexpectedly without prior agreement.
Meet by chance [píng shuǐ xiāng féng] Ping: duckweed; It floats in the wind; A fern with uncertain aggregation and dispersion. Go with the flow like duckweed; Meet by chance. It is a metaphor for strangers meeting by chance.
Meet a stranger [mê lxiā ng fé ng] Meet a stranger by chance.
An indissoluble bond Metaphor is an inseparable connection or relationship.
Tied together [Jie bùJi Yuán] Fate: Fate. Describe the love between men and women, inseparable. It also means that the two have an inseparable fate.
Only the tree is predestined friends [zh ǐ sh ǐ y 466u yuá n] Only the tree: Sanskrit, that is, only the garden, referred to as the solitary garden, is where Sakyamuni stopped when he left the country. Refers to the fate of Buddhism.
It's convenient to take a day off [tiā n jimm: qí bià n] leave: borrow. The fate given by heaven. Refers to a rare good opportunity.
Once in a lifetime [y and mi à n zh and yu á n] once in a lifetime.
There are thousands of miles to meet, and heaven remains our neighbourhood.
The idiom "thinking" describes a beautiful marriage.
Colorful clouds are easy to disperse: beautiful colorful clouds are easy to dissipate. Metaphor is that a happy marriage is easy to break down.
HongLing Dark: The old man is in charge of the marriage between people under the moon, and the red rope is used to tie the feet of new people. It used to mean that men and women got married through the introduction of a matchmaker.
Poems on Red Leaves: Coincident Stories of Maids' Marriage in Tang Dynasty. Metaphor is a coincidence of marriage.
Red leaves: Poems about red leaves. Metaphor marriage coincidence or a godsend.
Marriage: originally refers to a marriage that conforms to the feudal order. The latter refers to a beautiful marriage.
Planting jade in Lantian: The original meaning means that Yang Boyong planted jade in the endless mountains of Lantian and got a happy marriage. Later, it was used to describe that both men and women got a satisfactory and beautiful marriage.
Yuanyang: Yuanyang: bird name, often compared to husband and wife. Make it easy for couples not to match. It is also a metaphor for random marriage.
Women are beautiful and men are talented. Metaphor marriage is very happy.
Thousands of miles of marriage: a long marriage fate.
A thousand miles of marriage leads the way: marriage is formed by an old man secretly implicated in a red line under the moon. With "A Thousand Miles of Marriage".
As beautiful as a flower: as beautiful as a flower. Describe marriage as very beautiful.
On Sanshengshi: Buddhist story, the story of Ethan and monk Yuan Ze meeting in the afterlife in Tang Dynasty. By referring to previous marriages, we can remarry in the afterlife.
What are the idioms that "things" describe "fate"
1, indissoluble predestination bú ji ě zh and yuá n: Fate: Fate. An inseparable destiny. Metaphor is an inseparable connection or relationship.
2. I don't know each other across the street: I don't know each other face to face. Metaphor is that there is no fate between us.
3, divided into thin margins, fèn báo yuán qiān: In the old days, it was said that the fate was shallow.
4, the separation is shallow, thin fèn qiǎn yuán báo o: In the old days, it was called shallow.
In the old society, it was called shallow predestination.
6. inseparable jibúJi Yuán: fate: fate. Describe the love between men and women, inseparable. It also means that the two have an inseparable fate.
7, the fate is thin and the fate is shallow.
8. Only the tree is predestined friends qí shù yǒu yuán: Only the tree: Sanskrit, that is, only the garden, referred to as the solitary garden, is where Sakyamuni stopped when he spoke to China. Refers to the fate of Buddhism.
9. Thousands of miles of marriage qiān lǐ yīn yuán: a long marriage fate.
10, Suiyuan Lezhu: It's predestined, and you can donate as much as you like.
1 1, which is convenient for taking a day off. The fate given by heaven. Refers to a rare good opportunity.
12, Fate Y and mi à n zh and yu á n: Fate that once met.
What are the idioms in Lu Xing Wan Li Road? ...
Thousands of miles of different winds, hundreds of miles of different customs, that is, every place has its own customs and habits.
One lake and a thousand miles of thick soup, the soup made from a thousand miles of water shield is delicious, and there is no need to season it with salty black beans. Generally refers to local products with local flavor.
Sending goose feathers thousands of miles away is a metaphor. Although the gift is meager, it contains deep friendship.
Far away: far away. Describe a long way.
Thousands of miles with the same wind, the world is at peace.
A thousand miles is a metaphor for being casual and informal.
A thousand-mile marriage refers to the marriage formed by an old man secretly implicated by a red line under the moon.
The metaphor of "thousands of miles away" conveys things clearly and truly.
The levee of a thousand miles is destroyed by the ant nest, which can make the levee of a thousand miles burst. It is a metaphor that careless little things can cause big trouble.
"Purity" is a long-distance love. A dream warms my heart and seeks idioms.
I miss it very much and I will never forget it.
Yearning day and night
zhāo séméXiǎng
Explanation: in the morning; Dusk: at night. I'll miss it sooner or later. Describe missing or thinking about something very much.
The source is Feng Ming Menglong's "Warning Words" Volume 24: "Besides, Shen Hong has missed Yu Jie since the Mid-Autumn Festival night, and now he has missed everything."
Structural combination.
Usage is mostly used in relationships between men and women. Generally used as predicate and adverbial.
A positive tone; You can't pronounce "cháo".
Distinguish the shape of dusk; You can't write "Tomb" or "Mu".
Synonyms are hard to forget.
The antonym has been forgotten.
Discrimination between "never forget" and ~ ": Think all the time. But "unforgettable" generally refers to people or things that have been seen or contacted; And ~ generally means visible; It can also be someone or something you've never seen before.
It is my wish to go to Tsinghua University.
The Idiom Allusions of "Ba" in A Thousand Miles of Marriage
Out of the Tang Dynasty, Li Fuyan continued his mysterious strange records and engaged in betrothal shops.
Gu Wei, a scholar in the Tang Dynasty, used to play by the river when he was a child. One night, he saw a kind old man leafing through letters in the moonlight and tied two stones together with a red rope. Wei Gu was very surprised when he saw it. He casually asked, "Uncle, what are you doing with the stone?" The old man said, "I'm trying to get married!" " This is a perfect match for stones! "Wei Gu asked curiously," So who is my wife? " The old man said, "that's the girl who looks at the vegetable garden at the head of the village." "
Wei Gu was very angry and thought, That girl is poor and ugly. I don't want it. I might as well kill her. The next day, he passed by the vegetable garden and saw no one beside him. He picked up a stone and threw it at the girl. The girl fell to the ground with a plop, and Wei Gu fled to other places.
Ten years later, Wei Gu became a college student. Many people proposed to him, but no one was satisfied. One day, Wei Gu visited Zhang Yuanwai's family. When he saw the outstanding beauty of Bird Wai's niece, he liked it very much. The girl saw Gu Wei's handsome appearance, and she also had some love in her heart. Mr. Zhang sees it in his eyes and enjoys it in his heart. At present, he asked the matchmaker to get engaged and chose an auspicious day. On this big day. Wei Gu married this young lady to your family. On their wedding night, Wei Gu studied his beloved wife carefully and found a small scar on his forehead, so he asked her what was going on. The young lady said, "When I was a child, my family was poor. One day, I was picking vegetables in the garden. I don't know which wild boy hit me with a stone, so I left this scar. " After hearing this, Wei Gu was very surprised and told his wife what the old man said under the moon. Only then did he believe that fate was inseparable.
Since then, "a thousand miles of marriage is a thread" has been handed down.
What idioms are there to describe marriage?
Perfect couple
A happy marriage is easy to part.
Coincidence or Kyle XY.
Have a son
The marriage is very happy.
A thousand miles of marriage in Shi leads to a string of idioms.
Qi ā n l ǐ y ǐ Qiān lǐ yīn yuán yī xiàn qiān ā n, originally a story of the Tang Dynasty, was handed down by later generations as a symbol of fate, meaning that the marriage between husband and wife was predestined, and the old man secretly formed it with a red line under the moon.