First, the basic explanation of mourning:
Grief: sadness ~. ~ beg. ~ sigh. ~ Ming. ~ think. ~ everywhere ("love red", sad geese; There were groans and cries everywhere. ~ Yan (poetry is touching and gorgeous).
Mourning: ~ mourning. Silence.
In the old days, it was called the dead mother: ~ son (a. the mother died and the father survived; B. The so-called bereaved in ancient times).
Second, common phrases:
The mourners will win. I b ě ng b ? shing originally meant that the two armies were equal in strength, and the mourners won. The latter refers to the army that rises up against bullying and wins.
Sad? I chó u? Sorrow and sadness
Sorrow without hurting āIér Oshāng sorrow without sadness, describing the restraint of feelings; He also described poetry and music as beautiful and elegant, with moderate feelings. Metaphor does not overdo things.
Wail? ā i hao was in tears because of grief.
Mourning everywhere is a metaphor for the victims of hunger and cold. Metaphor in natural and man-made disasters are everywhere displaced, moaning and screaming hungry people.
Third, examples:
We all don't know how much sadness is behind his smile.
Sadness itself is beautiful, and more harm is harmful. Harmless sadness is a state, greater than struggling in pain, greater than being blinded in happiness.
In the disaster-stricken old China, the people were in dire straits, and sorrow was everywhere.