What are some auspicious idioms that begin with the character "二"?

The beautiful lady on the 28th day of the lunar month, the two benefits are in harmony, the two dragons play with the pearl, the two are of the same mind, and the moon is divided into two parts

One, the beautiful lady on the 28th day of the 28th year

[ èr bā jiā rén ]

二八: Refers to sixteen years old; Jiaren: beautiful woman. A beautiful woman of fifteen or sixteen years old.

Song Dynasty Su Shi's poem "Wearing Flowers on Li Ling's Seat": "Twenty-eight beauties are carried by fine horses, and ten thousand fine wines are sung by the Weicheng." (A pretty sixteen-year-old woman rides a small horse. The fragrant car was delivered, and he and the beautiful woman drank expensive wine and sang "Weicheng Song" loudly while drunk)

二、二狠狠的

[ èr huì jìng shuǎng ]

It is a metaphor that both brothers are good.

Zuo Qiuming's "Zuo Zhuan: The Third Year of Zhaogong": "It's still good for the two Hui to compete with each other." (Both brothers have very good abilities and are as good as each other.)

Three and two dragons playing with a pearl

[ èr lóng xì zhū ]

Two dragons face each other, playing with a pearl.

Chapter 3 of "A Dream of Red Mansions" by Cao Xueqin of the Qing Dynasty: "Wearing a purple gold crown with hair tied with jewels on the head, and two dragons playing with pearls on the eyebrows, wiping the forehead with gold." (Purple gold crown on the hair. Crown, with two dragons playing with pearls on the forehead)

4. Two people are of one mind

[ èr rén tóng xīn ]

Metaphor. As long as two people work together, they will be victorious.

"Shang Shu·Tai Oath": "I have ten rebellious ministers who are of one heart and one virtue." (Zhou Gongdan, Zhao Gongxi, Taigong Wang, Bi Gong, Rong Gong, Tai Dian, Hong Yao, San Yisheng , Nangong Kuo, and Wen Mu all cooperated to do the same thing)

Five, two points to the bright moon

[ èr fēn míng yuè ]

The ancients. It is believed that the bright moon in the world has only three points, and Yangzhou has only two points. It was originally used to describe the prosperous scene of Yangzhou. Today it is used as a metaphor that the local moonlight is particularly bright.

The poem "Remembering Yangzhou" by Xu Ning of the Tang Dynasty: "There are three points of bright moonlit nights in the world, and two points of rogues are in Yangzhou." (There are three points of bright moonlit nights in the world, and two of them are in Yangzhou.)