Self-mockery pronunciation: zì cháo
Word definition:
Self-mockery; self-mockery. Bai Juyi of the Tang Dynasty wrote the poem "I am happy to be old and laugh at myself".
Notes:
Bai Juyi:
Bai Juyi (772-846) was a poet of the Tang Dynasty. His courtesy name was Letian, and his name was Xiangshan Jushi. His ancestral home was Taiyuan (now part of Shanxi), and he later moved to Xiagui (now Weinan, Shaanxi). Jinshi during the Zhenyuan period. He successively served as Zuo Shiyi, Sima of Jiangzhou, governor of Hangzhou and Suzhou, and minister of the Ministry of Punishment. In literature, he actively advocated the New Yuefu Movement and was as famous as Yuan Zhen, also known as "Yuan Bai". He wrote the important poetic theory "Yi Yuan Jiu Shu" and the political allegorical poems "Qin Zhong Yin" and "New Yuefu" that reflect his poetic theory. The long narrative poems "Song of Everlasting Sorrow" and "Pipa Play" are recited by the world. There is "Bai's Changqing Collection".
Self-mockery:
Use words or actions to cover up or defend oneself from being laughed at.
Self:
1. Refers to oneself.
2. Call yourself to yourself.
3. Affirm yourself.
4. Couple; depend on each other. Since, still looks like.
Mockery:
To make fun of; to joke, to joke: to do serious things without fear of being laughed at | To laugh at each other is as if we were back in our boyhood.