I'm leaving, mom?
When I left.
Eyes with tears?
There is no turning back?
Dare not look back?
I know that casual look back?
Will make you inadvertently look?
Will a bitter smile keep me?
I know, okay?
You must have a smile on your face?
But your heart is crying, mom?
Do you know that?/You know what?
Did you just say, go, son?
Will mother wait for you when the tired child comes back?
I'm leaving, mom?
When I left.
Eyes with tears?
Dare not look back?
When I turned the maple grove in front of the door.
Can't you see me?
When the tears of Fenglin flow from my heart.
Can't you see me?
Just, mom?
I can't hold it any longer. Tears are as hard to stop as a thread?
I turned around, mom?
Dare I turn back?
I turned around.
Although tears can't see loess?
But I know?
Mom, are you still watching your son with the door?
It's been a long time, don't want to look back?
How many times have you cried and shouted in your dreams?
Mom, I want to go home?
How many times have you seen it in your dream, mom?
You gently use your warm hands?
Touch my crying wound?
Oh, mom?
I know. You've been behind me?
With encouraging eyes?
With hopeful eyes?
With a waiting smile ...
I see, mom?
You've been standing behind me?
Every time I dream back at midnight.
There is always a voice: go, son?
Mother will wait for you when the tired child comes back.
In China, there are many different names for mothers in spoken languages, including mother, mother, mommy (Cantonese pronunciation from the English word "mommy") or grandma and aunt. In some areas, children (especially in ancient times) called their mothers mother, aunt or mother, and there were also grandmothers (in Cantonese, "grandmother" refers to middle-aged or elderly maids). To others, a person's mother is called my mother and kindness, and her dead mother is called Xiancong. To others, a person's mother is called your mother or the hall of mourning. What needs special attention is that sometimes the father or mother's husband (stepfather) will also use the children's address to the mother (mother or mother) to represent his wife.
Children of different ages address their mothers differently. In infancy and childhood, children usually use some kind names, such as mother. After youth, the address is usually mom or something. Other appellations, such as mommy, mommy and mommy, can be seen in most age groups.
Among the ancient Han royal families in China, the princes and princesses born to the empress called their mothers the queen, and the children born to the imperial concubines were required to recognize the empress as the first mother, and the princes and their children also called their mothers the concubines. Princes and princesses in the Qing Dynasty called their mothers emperors. The English word "Queen Mother" refers to the mother of the current king or queen, that is, the queen mother, but the queen mother includes the former queen who is not the mother of the current monarch.
In a polygamous family in China, the father's wife is the first mother relative to an illegitimate child. They call the first mother "Auntie" and "Auntie". The father's concubine is an ordinary mother compared with the children born to the master room or other concubines. Children will call her "little mother", "mother X" (X is the ranking among wives and concubines), "aunt" and "aunt". The names of "aunt" and "aunt" come from the names of mothers and sisters in some areas.