Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - What is the difference between Sanyang Kaitai and Sanyang Kaitai?

What is the difference between Sanyang Kaitai and Sanyang Kaitai?

It doesn't matter, it's the same meaning. Sanyang Kaitai means Sanyang Kaitai, which is auspicious. When performing art, three sheep stand on their feet to show this.

The specific analysis is as follows:

According to the Book of Changes, the connected hexagrams are Yang hexagrams, the broken hexagrams are Yin hexagrams, the first month is Tai hexagrams, and three Yang hexagrams were born the next month. When winter goes and spring comes, yin fades and yang grows, just like good luck. Sanyang Kaitai is often used to praise the beginning of a year or to symbolize good luck.

In ancient China, sheep were regarded as animals and mascots. In Shuowen written by Xu Shen in Han Dynasty, it is said that "sheep are auspicious", and "auspicious" can also be written as "auspicious sheep", indicating good luck. The ancients regarded sheep as a symbol of beauty, and all beautiful things were described by sheep.

"Sheep" and "sheep" are homophonic, and many auspicious inscriptions are written as "auspicious sheep". "Shuo Wen Jie Zi" says: "Sheep are auspicious." "Three Yang Kaitai's" and "Three Yang Kaitai's" are auspicious.

Therefore, "Three Yang Kai Tai" and "Three Yang Kai Tai" are both used to praise the beginning of a year or imply auspiciousness, and are auspicious words for people to wish each other at the beginning of a year.

Extended data:

Allusions about sheep:

According to legend, sheep is the god of grains and will bring good luck to Guangzhou. "Taiping Magnolia" quoted Jin Peiyuan's "Guangzhou Ji" and contained the legend of Wuyang.

Until the early Qing Dynasty, the story of Wuyang was still talked about by local people. According to Qu Dajun's "Guangzhou Newspeak", there were five immortals in the ancient South China Sea, each wearing different colors of clothes and riding different colors of sheep. They came to Guangzhou and presented six ears of grain to people, hoping that there would never be a famine. Then, five immortals flew away and five sheep turned into stones.

Five immortals and five sheep bring good harvest. Guangzhou, referred to as Yangcheng for short, or Guangzhou for short, all originated from the legend of Wuyang.

References:

Baidu Encyclopedia-Sanyang Kaitai