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Seven fairies get married and one plays an idiom.
The answer to the idiom "the seven fairies get married" is: six gods have no owner.

There are seven fairies among the seven fairies. One is married, and there are six immortals left, so all six immortals are not married, and together they are six immortals without owners.

There is no master in six gods, an idiom in China. The pinyin is Liüshén wúzhǔ, which means to describe panic and lack of opinions. From Heng's "Zhuanlou Fu": "The five elements are all returned, and the six gods are all restored."

Feng Ming's magnum "Awakening the World" Volume 29: "I am afraid that the magistrate of a county has become a ghost without a master and has no mood to eat wine."

Synonym of six gods without master

1, panic

Panic is an idiom, which comes from Yuan Zhuan in the Northern Qi Dynasty: "(Yuan) Xiaoyou was executed, panicked, and looked very cultured." Panic is not knowing what to do at once because of panic.

2, uneasy

Uneasy, a Chinese idiom, pinyin is ι n shé n bü dü ng, which means fidgety. From Cao Qingxueqin's Dream of Red Mansions, Cao Qingxueqin's Dream of Red Mansions 1 13: "Just let Xifeng and others go, ask Granny Liu to sit in front of the bed, and tell him that she is uneasy, like a ghost."