What does "prosperously" mean?

"Zhengshengshang" means: developing upward day by day. Describes rapid development, mostly referring to life and business.

From "The Appearance of Officialdom" by Li Baojia of the Qing Dynasty: "Your elder brother is a great talent and has good management skills. Are you afraid that he will not prosper?"

Your elder brother is a great person. A talented person, very methodical in managing and arranging things, are you still worried about not being able to prosper?

Example Our great motherland is full of vitality and thriving.

The grammar is more formal; used as a predicate and attributive; it has a complimentary meaning

The synonyms are flourishing, rising like the sun, changing with each passing day, prosperous, prosperous, booming, prosperous, prosperous, Soaring upwards, reaching a hundred feet high

Antonyms for the river is declining, getting worse and worse, the situation is over, the sun is declining, and the work is getting worse

Extended information

1. Synonyms for thriving

Changing with each passing day

Explanation: new: updated; different: different. It is updated every day and changes every month. It refers to the rapid development or progress, the continuous emergence of new things and new phenomena.

From: "Book of Rites·University": "It is new every day, new every day, and new every day."

If there are new changes, there will be new changes every day, and there will be new changes every day. New changes.

Example: China has undergone tremendous changes in the past fifty years.

Grammatical conjunction; used as predicate, object, attributive; with a complimentary meaning

2. Antonym of flourishing

River sinking

Explanation of water in rivers It flows downward day by day. It means that the situation is getting worse day by day.

From Chapter 29 of "The Appearance of Officialdom" by Li Baojia of the Qing Dynasty: To be honest with you, the current situation is really getting worse!

Example Since that business lost money, his career has been in decline.

Grammar subject-predicate form; used as predicate, object, complement; refers to the deterioration of career energy, etc.