Fortune Telling Collection - Free divination - Which idiom does this picture represent?

Which idiom does this picture represent?

Old man under the moon [yuxi à l m: o ré n]

Origin: Tang Li Fuyan's "Continued Mystery" recorded a legendary story: Wei Gu in the Tang Dynasty passed by Song Cheng and met an old man turning over a book in the moonlight. After asking, I realized that the old man is a god who specializes in human marriage, and the books I searched were marriage books.

Interpretation: Originally refers to the immortal in charge of marriage. Later refers to the matchmaker. Referred to as "Yue Lao".

Synonym: Matchmaker's words made in heaven.

Example:

The matchmaking agency "is the elderly under the moon in modern society, helping people form partners and live together."

Thanks to the birth of an old man this month, they can finally get married.

We can get married, and we really should thank him for matchmaking.

Coincidentally, I inadvertently played the old man under the moon and brought the couple together.

In the folk concept, if you want a happy marriage, you must ask the elderly under the moon for help.

They invited the manager to be an old man under the moon and arranged the marriage.

Many unmarried men and women went to the temple to pray for a beautiful marriage to the elderly under the moon.

I'm glad to be old next month and take you two young people with me.

Peter played Tim and my dad and arranged for us to meet at the dance.

The old man under the moon. I wish them a happy life together!

Unmarried men and women often turn to the elderly under the moon, hoping to find a marriage made in heaven.