Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - Break the laurel and climb the toad.

Break the laurel and climb the toad.

Climbing laurel and climbing toad mean: climb to the moon and win laurel. Yu boarded the first place.

First, pinyin

【zhé? guì? pān chán].

Second, the source

Qin Yuan Fu Jian's "Dongtanglao" is the first fold: "You are proud of climbing toads and folding laurel trees, and you are ashamed of closing the moon."

Third, synonyms

Folding laurel in the moon: climbing osmanthus in the moon palace. Metaphor should be successful in the imperial examination era. From the biography of Shen Xi in the Book of Jin: "Emperor Wu sent someone to the East Hall and asked,' What do you think?' He said,' I am number one in the world, a branch of Guilin, and Pian Yu in Kunshan. "

Fourth, antonyms.

Sun Shan: The name comes from Sun Shan. Of not being admitted to the exam; There are no names on the list. Song Dynasty's "Court Record" said: "Wu people, funny. To carry his county, the villagers asked his son to go with them. The villagers are depressed, and the mountain is at the end of the list, so they return first. The villagers asked his son about his gains and losses, and the mountain said,' Sun Shan solved his name, and Xianlang is even outside Sun Shan.' "

Example of verb (abbreviation for verb):

As far as his literary and artistic talents are concerned, he was famous in the world at that time.

Allusions of laurel and toad:

During the reign of Emperor Wu of Jin Dynasty, Cui Hong, the official minister, recommended him as the left prime minister. Later, when he became the secretariat of Yongzhou, Emperor Wu of Jin asked him what he thought of himself. He said, "I am like Guizhi in the Moon Palace and Baoyu on Kunlun Mountain." Emperor Wu of song laughed and praised him. A laurel in Guanghan Palace and a Pian Yu in Kunlun Mountain are used to describe particularly outstanding talents, which is the origin of "the laurel of the moon".

Moon: Moon Palace. Fold laurel; Broken osmanthus, osmanthus moon palace. There was a three-legged toad in the Moon Palace in Han mythology, and later people also called the moon the Moon Palace. Osmanthus fragrans climbing the Moon Palace. Metaphor should be successful in the imperial examination era. After the Tang Dynasty, the imperial examination system prevailed, and the laurel of the moon was used as a metaphor for scholars who passed the examination.