Fortune Telling Collection - Ziwei fortune-telling - Zhu De idioms daquan

Zhu De idioms daquan

The idioms of wishing include tattoo of hope, hope to live long, hope to dye a dream list, hope to suffocate, hope to be cursed and so on.

1, wish to get a tattoo

[zh zhāwén shēn]: cut short hair and portray the figure. Refers to the customs and costumes of foreigners outside the Central Plains.

The source is "Legend of Hub Beam Thirteen Years of Mourning for the Duke": "Wu, the country of the righteous emperor, is willing to get a tattoo." Jin Sun said about Bi Xing: "Uncle Zhou abandoned his flesh and blood and entrusted him to a foreign land, wishing him a tattoo and keeping it, but calling him the supreme virtue and writing about the Great Sage."

2. celebrate your birthday.

[zh HSHòu yán nián]: Congratulations on your longevity.

The third fold of Ming and Wu Ming's Wei Zi Palace: "God ordered the Golden Mother to hold a banquet, and the gathering of immortals will invite you to celebrate your birthday and prolong your life, making you wonderful and beautiful."

3. Make a wish to dye a dream list

[zhr?n mèng b?ng]: Zhu Ran: name; Dream: Dream. Zhu Ran dreams of becoming the first prize. Metaphor is that good is rewarded with good.

The source is Zhang Qingying's "Yuan Jianlei believes in porridge three": "Once upon a time, there was a man named Zhu Ming who tasted the hunger of the year and gave porridge to the poor in all directions. After his son was born, he went to the exam for the first time and dreamed that he was standing outside the door with the first prize list ... Not long after, someone reported that his son had won the first prize. "

I hope you suffocate.

[zhügěng zhüyü]: Wish: pray; Asphyxia: food blocks the esophagus. The ancient emperors showed respect and support for the elderly: invited the old minister to drink and eat, and set up special people to pray not to choke to death.

The source of Han Jiashan's Yan Zhi: "Only raise imperial academy's three elders, feed them with sauce, and die with a title. I would like to choke first, and I would like to choke later."

I wish you many curses.

This means that it is better to hope to benefit than to curse to suffer.

The source of Hong Song Mai's Four Poems of Rong Zhai: "One person wishes it, one country curses it, and one wish cannot be cursed. Is it inappropriate for the country to die? "