1, Tian Yun is a Chinese vocabulary, pronounced as [yúntián], a farming term and a neutral word. It refers to the field management of irrigation, fertilization, spraying, weeding and Tian Yun in the process of rice growth. The word "Tian Yun" comes from Miscellaneous Seven in Summer Village, which shows Tian Yun's achievements at night, and the children in the village are in charge. Although the children don't plow and weave, they also learn a kind of melon in the shade of mulberry trees.
2. The word "ploughing" in the poem is interpreted as: weeding in the field. Generally refers to: managing fields and weeding, engaged in field work. Tian Yun is a Chinese vocabulary, pronounced yúntián, an agricultural term and a neutral word. It refers to the field management such as irrigation, fertilization, spraying, weeding and field cultivation in the process of rice growth. The word "Tian Yun" comes from the summer village of Qi Xing. Interpretation: farming has nothing to do with tools, it is a farming term.
Farming refers to stepping grass into the soil regularly with your feet when seedlings grow up, so you don't have to worry about it when seedlings grow up, that is, pulling out stubborn grass taller than rice. Tian Yun seems to be a light job, with almost no production tools, and returned empty-handed. Either pin a knife to your waist and insert a hook knife into it. When you see thorns on the ridge, you can chop them off, or you can touch the snail loach while plowing, catch it and put it in, and take it home as an appetizer or improve your food. In the hot sun, you wear a hat, also known as a hat, and a raincoat or hemp fiber in rainy days.