2. Fame, pronounced shēng míng què qǐ, describes a sudden surge in fame and a rapid increase in popularity. The writer won the Lu Xun Literature Prize and became famous immediately. From where? In the Qing Dynasty, Li Dou recorded in "The Original Boat of Yangzhou in the New City North": "Zhihong class became famous, and the people in the class were called loyal ministers." Zhu didn't have any fame before, but at the age of 50, he suddenly became famous for his loyalty.
3, mountain magpie, pronunciation? Shān què is a kind of bird, which is also a famous bird and a red-billed blackbird. Shaped like a magpie, its feathers are black and spotted, its mouth and feet are red, and its tail is very long, but it can't fly far. It can prey on chickens and finches. Sentence reference:? The mountain magpie is a rare bird.
4. Meet at Queqiao, pronounced què qiáo xiāng huì. According to China folklore, on the night of the seventh day of the seventh lunar month, a magpie bridged the Milky Way, allowing the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl to meet on the bridge. The rainy day on Tanabata is their tears. Metaphor lovers or couples reunited after a long separation. Valentine's Day on Qixi is the day when the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl meet at the annual Magpie Bridge.
From Quan Deyu's Tanabata in the Tang Dynasty: "Today's Geng Yun crossing the Magpie Bridge should be different from the pulse." Today, clouds are helping magpies cross the Milky Way. They shouldn't be miles apart.
5, white magpie, pinyin for bái què, refers to white magpie, which was considered to be a bird in ancient times. White magpie was a common bird in ancient times, but it seems to be rare now.
Extended data
The evolution of magpie characters;
"vocabulary? No night: the same magpie. Mozi? Lu Wen said, "The loser who cuts bamboo and wood will fly if he succeeds, not in three days. "
In the vernacular, it is: the same magpie. "Mo Wen" said: "The losers cut bamboo and wood into magpies, cut them and discard them. Magpie glides gently, and it doesn't fall for three days. "
The usage of the word magpie: magpie is a noun, a pictophonetic character, a bird and a past sound. The word book changed from a book to a bird. See Shuowen and the word "true". The original meaning is magpie. Magpies have a nest where pigeons live. -"Poetry Zhao Nan Magpie Nest" means that magpies build nests and pigeons come to live.