In Handan dialect, "bending over" means "hooking up", for example, "Look at him crouching there." Hooked on the waist, some people say it is "the pot on the waist." It can be seen that "hooking up" is "Luo Guo". It is a couplet, which can often be reversed, so it can also be called a basket. The writing of Lian Mian dialect is often inaccurate, and only its homophones are taken.
Extended data:
Synonym introduction of "Goubuli": Luo Guo
Pronunciation: luó gu, luó guo
Express meaning: it means (moving) bending (waist) to pick up cotton; An arch.
Source: Yang Shuo's "Three Thousand Miles of Rivers and Mountains" paragraph 5: "Tell him not to sleep, and he will bend over and sit on an empty wooden box."
Example: In the middle of Qing Dynasty, there was a representative calligrapher named Liu Yong.