Explanation of vulgar guests
(1). Refers to guests who are not elegant. Han Yu of the Tang Dynasty wrote "Twenty-one Odes of the Three Halls of Fenghe and Guozhou Liu Geshi Shijun, Bamboo Cave": "The door of the cave has no key, and the lay guests never come." Song Mei Yaochen's "Drinking with the Family at Night in the Boat" poem: " "Drinking alone with a woman is better than meeting a common guest." One of the poems in "Crossing the Xuhuai River on a Rainy Night" by Qingzha Shenxing: "The Five Classics are self-taught by a good child, and half of them are not familiar with common people." (2). , as opposed to gods, monks, or reclusive people. Li Fuyan of the Tang Dynasty wrote in "Xu Xuan Wei Lu·Li Weigong Jing": "Jing's secular guests are not those who ride on the clouds, how can they make rain?" Chapter 38 of "The Romance of the Three Kingdoms": "After Kong Ming finished chanting, he turned over and asked the boy: 'There are customs Are you coming? 'The boy said, 'Uncle Liu has been waiting here for a long time. '"
Word analysis
Customs are customs, etiquette, and habits that have been formed for a long time in society. Wait: vulgar. customs. Customs. Convention (refers to something that is recognized and formed by the masses through long-term practice). Popular, most popular, common: common name. Common saying. Popular song. Refined and popular. Uninteresting, annoying: guest's explanation guest è foreign (person), opposite to "host": guest. guests. Receive guests. uninvited guest. polite . Guest. A (person) who goes out or lives in a foreign place: a traveler. guest house. Guest status. Guest death. Service objects in the service industry: customers. passenger. passenger flow.
Refers to someone who travels around to engage in certain activities