Question 2: What exactly does Liu Ye mean in Xuzhou dialect? Is there any reason? I come from Xuzhou. When I said this sentence in Xuzhou, I usually said it to others without thinking, or I said something inappropriate on an inappropriate occasion. For example, if you have dinner with someone you don't know very well, you will say that you want to shit, and others will say it is Liuye.
Liu Ye's main desire should be: simple-minded, but also with a certain hooliganism.
Origin: People's lungs are five leaves, and it is said that donkey's lungs are six leaves, so six leaves is swearing, not a donkey. Some people also said that the statement of gasping for six leaves was later omitted and directly said that you were too six.
How's it going? Is the answer okay?
Question 3: What does six-leaf species mean, the glory of the king?
Question 4: What is the meaning of Bengbu dialect in Liu Ye? Is to act rashly without thinking.
Question 5: What do you mean by six leaves and thirteen o'clock? Please elaborate. "Liuye" refers to the thirteen common sayings of swearing and "stupidity". The word meaning is equivalent to stupidity and ignorance. It is one of the most frequently used words in Shanghai dialect. Proverbs have different interpretations. Some people think that it is English hysterical pidgin, but the general symptoms of hysteria are crazy impatience and vague language, which is quite different from it, so most people deny this source. According to 1922, the thirteen paintings of the word * * * are interpreted in A Guide to Shanghai Suzhou Dialect, which shows that this explanation is more in line with the fact that Shanghainese implicitly mean that they are obsessed with "thirteen points". "Thirteen points" in Shanghai dialect mainly refers to women's stupidity and ignorance, such as infatuation, infatuation and dementia. And this word is mostly from the mouth of women, and men rarely use it. Because "Shisanfen" comes from thirteen strokes of "infatuation", many words that are completely synonymous with "Shisanfen" have been derived later, such as "B-split" and "telephone receiver" (the old telephone receiver had 13 holes). . At first, "thirteen o'clock" meant "ringing the bell". In the past, the clock struck every hour. For example, at four o'clock in the afternoon, the pendulum will strike four times, at five o'clock, twelve o'clock at the most, but it will strike thirteen times. Is there thirteen o'clock? Of course, there is something wrong, as the saying goes, epilepsy! So thirteen points is commonly known as "thirteen points", which means stupidity and ignorance. It is one of the most frequently used words in Shanghai dialect. Used to describe people who are stupid or unreasonable in words and deeds, and sometimes used as swearing words to make fun of them, which smells strange or doesn't hurt feelings. Shanghainese often call "thirteen points" "idiots". Besides describing people as brainless or frivolous, they also refer to being outspoken and stupid. Zhao Wei's Princess Pearl is probably the most standard "thirteen points". However, when the word jumps out of the opposite sex, its meaning becomes ambiguous. On the surface, it is swearing. In fact, it is not really blaming, but "lightly blaming". In other words, it was not Lu who killed uncle, but Wang Xifeng who slapped Mr. Lian. So "thirteen o'clock" mostly comes from the mouth of women. When scolding, women often have a smile on their faces, and their eyes are full of provocative light. Men who are scolded are often lighter. For example, there is a man in his forties who is very much in love with his wife in public and likes her to call himself "little darling". Such a man can't help but give him "thirteen points" in his heart when he sees it, but his wife throws a "thirteen points" face to face like giving him an award in public, and his face immediately lights up. Regarding the origin of "Thirteen Points", the first argument is that "Thirteen Points" comes from two cards "Wu Yao" and "Liu Yao" in the Pai Jiu. These two cards are "short pairs", indicating that people's words and deeds are "wrong". Six plus seven equals thirteen, and it can also be used as a two-part allegorical saying, such as "He is a bit of a five-six" and deliberately "rested" at thirteen o'clock. The second way of saying it: "Thirteen o'clock" is a slang word in Shanghai, because after liberation, a large number of Shanghainese moved south and became an interesting Cantonese dialect. At first, "thirteen o'clock" meant "ringing the bell". In the past, the clock struck every hour. For example, at four o'clock in the afternoon, the pendulum will strike four times, at five o'clock, twelve times at most, but thirteen times. Is there thirteen o'clock? Of course, there is another problem, as the saying goes, epilepsy! So "thirteen o'clock" means that everyone is "epileptic". The third statement: There is also a "joking" explanation for the "13 o'clock" on the beach. In the scene of "Eighteen Gifts" in butterfly lovers, I courted Liang many times, winked at him and showed my love to Liang several times, but Liang was silly and indifferent. This is the playwright's artistic technique, deliberately paving the way for the later tragedy. Liang Shanbo in Shanghai's population is homophonic with "238", and the sum of these three numbers is thirteen, while mocking Liang Shanbo is thirteen points. "Nong is really, and I am actively interested in Nong, and Nong is worthy!" Others: According to the thirteen paintings of the word * * in A Guide to Shanghai: A Summary of Shanghai-Suzhou Dialect (1922), it is obvious that this explanation is more in line with the implicit reference of Shanghai people to "thirteen points". Because "thirteen points" originated from thirteen strokes of "red", many words which are completely synonymous with "thirteen points" were later derived, such as "disassembly" and "telephone receiver" (the old telephone receiver had 13 holes) ... >; & gt
Question 6: What do six leaves mean in Xinyi dialect? People's lungs have five lobes, so if you say how long you are, you will naturally scold you ~
The rest should be left over from dialects. . At least I don't know why.
Question 7: What do four-leaf clover and six-leaf clover stand for respectively? The leaves of clover are meaningful:
The first film stands for "faith",
The second film stands for "hope".
The third part stands for "love";
If it is a four-leaf clover, the fourth piece stands for "luck".
And luck is a harbinger of happiness, do you believe it?
In fact, the story of Cloverleaf has the second half:
When you find clover, don't tell anyone.
Otherwise, luck will fly away.
Five films of Fortune
The six films are Status and Fame.
Seven movies represent a narrow escape.
Question 8: You think too much. What does a big tree with six leaves represent? The rich tree is just a trade name given by the merchants. Scientific name Guali, also known as Malabari. Its palmately compound leaves may have 5- 1 1 lobule. The length of leaflets is related to growth time, environment and other factors.
Question 9: What is the moral of six-leaf clover? Lucky grass, four-leaf oxalis, is a mutant with four inverted heart-shaped leaflets.
Legend has it that the first leaf of clover represents faith, the second represents love, and the third represents hope ... when there is one more leaf, this one represents luck.
Oxalis is the national flower of Ireland, and boy scouts also use it as a badge. Ordinary sorrel has only three leaflets, and occasionally four leaflets are mutated, which is called "lucky grass". It is said that if there are four leaflets, Cloverleaf can realize its wish. The reason why Cloverleaf is special is actually a mutation phenomenon, so Cloverleaf is purely a mutation. Occasionally, an individual composed of four lobular mutations will appear, commonly known as "Lucky Grass".
Oxalis four-leaf has always been regarded as a symbol of luck. In fact, it is the same reason that some people have six fingers. A random mutation makes plants grow a fourth "finger", just like a genetic mutation makes people grow an extra finger.
In any case, many countries do have the legend of four-leaf lucky oxalis, and the early Celts in Wales believed that white oxalis could fight the devil. In 1620, Sir john mayer Dunn wrote: If anyone meets any grass with four leaves in the field, it will be good luck. -
The leaves of clover are meaningful:
The first film stands for "faith",
The second film stands for "hope".
The third part stands for "love";
If it is a four-leaf clover, the fourth piece stands for "luck".
And luck is a harbinger of happiness, do you believe it?
In fact, the story of Cloverleaf has the second half:
When you find clover, don't tell anyone.
Otherwise, luck will fly away.
Five films of Fortune
The six films are Status and Fame.
Seven movies represent a narrow escape.
Question 10: What do you mean by six leaves? "Six leaves" refers to swearing and "stupidity"