Fortune Telling Collection - Free divination - What's the difference between me and loneliness?

What's the difference between me and loneliness?

About "What's the difference between me and loneliness?" The answer to the question is as follows:

1, loneliness and I have different meanings.

Loneliness: During the Spring and Autumn Period, vassals usually claimed to be widowed. Once the country is in disaster, they are called loners or loners.

Me: In ancient divination, turtle shells were often baked on fire to predict good luck or bad luck from their tiny cracks. The cracks on the ship are also very small, similar to those on the turtle shell, so I extend them to signs and signs.

Loneliness and I come from different sources.

Solitary: In the Tang Dynasty, like me, the solitary house became the exclusive use of the emperor. The so-called loneliness in later generations means calling yourself king and emperor.

Me: Before Qin Shihuang, I was just a common word that anyone could use, not exclusive to the monarch. Previously, the monarch was alone, meaning that men had few virtues, and he was very modest. There is also a saying that Qin Shihuang called himself "Zheng" because his surname got Zheng's first name. "I" and "Zheng" sound similar, so in order to avoid the emperor's taboo, others are not allowed to call me, so I use it alone to address the emperor.

Expand knowledge:

Loneliness, the difference between loneliness and me

First, the original intention is different.

(1) The saying of loneliness appeared in the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, and originally referred to people who were isolated and helpless from the masses. The vassal laughed at himself for being lonely, just like a person.

(2) I am a person with few virtues, which means "a person who has not done enough morally". It is the humble title of ancient monarchs and princes.

(3) I, the Modern Chinese Dictionary's interpretation of "I" is: "Before the Qin Dynasty, it meant' mine' or' mine'.

Second, there are different ages.

(1) Solitary is often used in the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period; At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, Yuan Shu, Cao Cao, Sun Quan, Liu Bei and others were called "Southern Orphans". At this time, "loneliness" is more popular. While calling Wang Wei and Sun Quan emperors, Cao Cao still called himself "lonely" instead of "me".

(2) During the Spring and Autumn Period, governors claimed to be widowed; The governors of Northern Wei, Northern Zhou and Sui Dynasties often claimed to be widowed, while Er Zhurong, Gao Huan and other lean men claimed to be lonely.

Since the Tang Dynasty, few people claimed to be widowed. For example, the princes of the Tang Dynasty and warlords, Wang, Tian Yue and Li Na fought against the imperial court together, and each claimed to be the king. The leader claimed to be widowed, while Wang and others claimed to be widowed. When Tang Shunzong was a prince, he called himself a widow. Guo Wei claimed to be a widow before she proclaimed herself emperor in the Five Dynasties.

At the end of the Qin Dynasty and the beginning of the Han Dynasty, Xiang Yu's enfeoffment kings (such as Hanwang and Liu Bang) and Liu Bang's enfeoffment kings (such as Han Xin and Qi Wang) all claimed to be widowed, and many of them claimed to be widowed after the Han governors.

(3) "I", which means "mine" or "me" in the Qin Dynasty, has been used exclusively as an emperor since Qin Shihuang.

Third, the status is different.

(1) Zhao Yi, a scholar in the Qing Dynasty, investigated the usage of "I am widowed" in history: in the Spring and Autumn Period, governors called themselves widowed, while weaker governors called themselves "lonely".

(2) After Qin Shihuang unified the six countries, Prime Minister Li Si suggested that "I" be the first person pronoun exclusive to the emperor. Only the emperor can call himself "I".

However, I am a more written self-assertion, which often only appears in official documents such as imperial edicts. In daily life, emperors often mention me, me and loneliness.