What does the tide mean?

Tides have two meanings:

1. Tidal head was originally a Chinese word, meaning the peak of the tide, which was taken from Dou Chang's poem Looking North at Night in the Tang Dynasty.

2. Individual places indicate the most fashionable and unrestrained young people, neutral.

3. In the network vocabulary, it also refers to the embodiment of the trend.

There is a poem, "It's time to sail and set sail." It contains a "tidal head".

This means it's time to move on. We should seize this opportunity and do something.

Extended data:

Su Shi, a poet in the Song Dynasty, also used the word "tidal head" in "Five Wonders of Watching Tides on August 15th".

Want to know how high the tide is? The mountains were muddy in the waves. It means knowing how high the tide is, even the mountains are completely swallowed up by the waves.

These five poems about the tides in Qiantang were written by Su Shi at the Mid-Autumn Festival in the sixth year of Xining, Song Shenzong (1073), and the author was a judge in Hangzhou at that time. Every year from August 15 to 18 of the lunar calendar, the tide surges, which is more peculiar than usual. The tide is like Malik galloping, and the mountains fly away, which is shocking. Poets of all ages have many poems. Su Shi's Seven Wonders Group is one of his representative works.

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