The old and the young
The old man, Huang Tong, is a Chinese idiom,
Pinyin: B á is ǒ Uhu á NGT ó ng,
Definition: refers to the old man with white hair and the child with yellow hair. It refers to old and young.
idiom
The old and the young
Pinyin
báisǒuhuángtóng
Citation explanation
Old people with white hair and children with yellow hair. It refers to old and young. Su Zhe of Song Dynasty wrote in the article of Prime Minister Ma, the priest of the three provinces: "the old man, Huang Tong, weavers, cultivates, the common people rest, and the sun and the moon use their whiskers." Song Qinan's Shouyun Emissary: the old man and Huang Tong are happy and meet lucky stars on his birthday. The whole city asked the Yamen detective to propose a few cups tomorrow morning. Song Xu Dezhi's "Yusi mountain": Jiang Zuoyu's Blue Maid in a bun makes you worry about everything. To make the old and the young generation, as in Qingjiang bizhang. Ming · anonymous's "returning home in Splendor" the fourth fold: "depending on the virtue and kindness, the old and the young, burning incense and propriety, I will always enjoy happiness." The ninth chapter of sweeping brooms by Zhuang people in Qing Dynasty!
Discrimination of words
Synonyms old and young English translation old and young & lt; white haired men and babes & gt; degree of common use: common emotional color: commendatory words; grammatical usage: as subject, object and attribute; referring to old and young; idiom structure: combination; generation time: Ancient
Chinese PinYin : bái sǒu huáng tóng
The old and the young
There was a rush of remonstrance. jiàn zhēng rú liú