1, good luck.
Interpretation: auspicious: auspicious. Satisfied. Celebrate others' happiness and contentment.
Source: Inscription of Statue by Zhang Cheng in the Southern and Northern Dynasties: "To build a Guanyin statue area for the dead parents; The family size of eight people, etc.; Good luck. "
Example: An educated young man was admitted to a university, and he walked happily by the river. When he saw the carp jumping out of the water, the writer could take this opportunity to say that it was a symbol of good luck and a bright future for Wan Li.
2, such as Deng Chuntai.
Interpretation: Chuntai: a beautiful place for traveling and sightseeing, which means an excellent living environment. It seems to live in a happy and peaceful world.
Source: Chapter 20 of Laozi: Everyone is bustling, if they enjoy too much prison, they will be on the platform.
3. Fu Taian Kang.
Interpretation: It means safe and healthy, which means auspicious.
4. All the best.
Interpretation: Ruyi: To one's liking. Everything is in line with my wishes and goes well.
5. Always be United.
Interpretation: As a kind of blessing, Yong Jie Tong Xin is used in marriage life to express the harmony between husband and wife, caring for each other and family harmony. It is also used to bless the newly married couple, who will be United forever, grow old together and get along well for a hundred years. This dish also expresses that husband and wife will always have the same heart, heart connection, mutual understanding and dependence.
6, pillow wash stone.
Interpretation: In the old days, it referred to seclusion.
Source: Southern Dynasties Song Liu Yiqing's "Shi Shuo Xin Yu Pai Diao": Wang Yue: Can the flow pillow the stone and wash it? Sun yue: so I want to wash my ears with a pillow; So wash stone to sharpen its teeth.
Example: pillow wash Shi Jun's family affairs, thinking and joining the army.
origin
There are more than 50,000 idioms, 96% of which are in four-character format, and there are also idioms with three, five, six and seven characters or more. Such as "pot calling the kettle black", "shut the door", "unnecessary", "haste makes waste" and "drunkenness is not about wine". Idioms generally use four words, probably because four words are easy to catch.
For example, the book of songs, a collection of poems in ancient China, is mostly composed of four sentences, and the ancient history, Shangshu, also contains some four sentences. Later, I began to read Sanzi Jing, Baijia surname and Qianzi Wen, of which the last two were all four sentences.