I. Li Jiang 【 lǐ dài táo jiāng 】
Interpretation: The original metaphor is that brothers help each other and love each other. Later, it was used to mean to replace or suffer for others.
Origin: Guo Maoqian's "Yuefu Poetry Collection: Chicken Singing" in the Southern Song Dynasty: "The peach is digging the well, the plum tree is next to the peach, the worm comes to gnaw at the peach root, and the plum tree replaces the peach. Trees are generations, and brothers still remember them! "
Second, Li Guo Zhou Xian [l ǐ gu is not Xiān zhōu] not u]
Interpretation: It is often used as a signal for friends to date each other.
Origin: According to the Biography of Guo Tai in the Later Han Dynasty, Mars and Guo Tai were in the same boat. They looked at each other from the guest and thought they were immortals, so they were called "Li".
Three. Guo Li is in the same boat.
Interpretation: Use it as a metaphor to know that you have got along. In the same boat as LiGuo.
Source: Wei's poem "I don't meet each other in the first ten years of Shuidiao Song": "I heard that there is no distance between mountains and rivers, Li Chuan."
Fourth, Gua Tian, Li Xia
Explanation: It is a metaphor for an occasion that easily arouses suspicion.
Source: Biography of Northern History Yuan: "long summer, the ancients were cautious."
Verb (abbreviation of verb) Li Bai's peach blossom
Interpretation: Peach blossom red, plum blossom white. Refers to the beautiful and pleasant scenery in spring.