Poetry about salty

1. The idiom of the word Xian

Xianyang Yiju: Xianyang: the capital of the Qin Dynasty; Ju: torch, extended to burn with fire. A fire in Xianyang. It refers to the fact that Xiang Yu led his army to Xianyang and burned down the Qin Palace. It generally refers to a fire that burns it all away.

Xian and reform: refers to everything that is old and new.

Salty-tongued: a metaphor for making trouble over nothing or having nothing to say.

Salty wind and egg rain: refers to wind and rain on the sea.

Xian Wu Deng San: Refers to the emperor’s virtues and virtues, which are the same as those of the Five Emperors but surpass those of the Three Kings.

Xian and Weixin: refers to everything that is old and new. Same as "Xian and Reform".

Sour, salty, bitter and spicy: refers to various flavors. A metaphor for various situations such as happiness and pain. Same as "sweet, bitter and spicy".

Hundreds of wastes are put into practice: refers to the establishment of all abandoned things. Same as "all wastes will prosper".

Neither salty nor bland: ①Plain; ordinary. ② Refers to sarcasm and ridicule.

Hundreds of wastes and all the wastes are put into practice. Same as "all wastes will prosper".

Sour, salty, bitter and spicy is the same as "sweet, sour, bitter and spicy".

Xian and Weixin See "Xian and Weixin".

Xian Wu Deng San "Historical Records: Biography of Sima Xiangru": "Fang Jiang will increase the seal of Mount Tai, add Liang Fu's affairs, sing the He Luan, and praise music, go up to Xian Wu, and go down to Deng San. "Han Shu·Sima Xiangru Biography" quoted this article, and Yan Shigu noted: "Xian, all, it means that the virtues of the Han Dynasty and the five emperors are all prosperous, and they are higher than the three kings." Later, it was called "Xian Wu". "Deng San" means that the emperor's virtue is broad, equal to the five emperors but superior to the three kings.

Salty wind and egg rain 〖Explanation〗 refers to wind and rain on the sea.

Salty-tongued and flat-tongued is a metaphor for making trouble over nothing or having nothing to say.

Salty and reform means everything is getting rid of the old and renewing. 2. Idioms describing dishes that are very salty

Eat without a sweet taste

shí bù gān wèi

Explanation of the sweet taste: It tastes good. Everything I eat feels tasteless. It describes that there is something on one's mind and the food doesn't taste good.

Source "Warring States Policy·Qi Ce Five": "The King of Qin was afraid of it, could not sleep well, and could not eat well."

Supplementary structure.

Usage is mostly used to describe feeling uneasy, overworked, weak, etc. Generally used as predicate and complement.

The correct pronunciation is not; it cannot be pronounced as "bú".

It is sweet to distinguish the shape; it cannot be written as "gan".

Synonyms: uneasy, sitting on pins and needles

Antonyms: calm, at ease

Example: This contradiction cannot be resolved; it makes me really restless; ~.