Which one is correct between having a long history and a long history?

It is correct to have a long history.

Pinyin: yuán yuǎn liú cháng.

Pinyin: ㄩㄢˊㄩㄢˇㄌ一ㄡˊㄔㄤˊ.

Explanation: source: the source; flow: the flow of water. The source of the river is far away and the current is very long. Metaphor has a long history.

Source: "The Epitaph of Li's Wife, Mrs. Pei Jun, the Governor of Haizhou" by Bai Juyi of the Tang Dynasty: "The one with a long history will have a long history, and the one with deep roots will have luxuriant branches."

Example: Exploiting Class The concept of happiness has a long history and its influence is still quite profound. (Qin Mu's "The Heroic Voice of a Black Warrior")

The correct pronunciation: "长", cannot be pronounced as "zhǎng".

Shape identification: "source" cannot be written as "original".

Usage: conjunction; used as predicate and attributive; with a complimentary meaning.

Emotions: Long-standing and well-established is a compliment.

Synonyms: continuously, continuously, continuously.

Antonyms: tree without roots, water without source.

Synonyms with a long history

Continuously

Pinyin: yuán yuán bù duàn.

Phonetic: ㄩㄢˊㄩㄢˊㄅㄨˋㄉㄨㄢˋ.

Explanation: Yuanyuan: the appearance of continuous water flow. Describe continuously.

Source: "Mencius Ten Thousand Chapters 1": "I want to see it often, so it comes one after another."

The correct pronunciation: "No", cannot be pronounced as "bú".

Shape identification: "source" cannot be written as "original".

Usage: more formal; used as attributive and adverbial; refers to continuity.

Emotion: Continuously is a neutral word.

Synonyms: endless, continuous, continuous.

Antonyms: intermittently, intermittently.