Split the soil
Fenmaolietu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ē nm á Oli è t ǔ, which originally refers to the ceremony held by ancient emperors when they enfeoffment princes, later known as enfeoffment princes. It comes from Yu Gong, the book of history.
terms
Frequency of use: less use
pronunciation
fēnmáoliètǔ
interpretation
It originally refers to the ceremony held when the ancient emperors enfeoffed the princes. It is a symbol of granting land and rights to the princes. Later, it was called enfeoffment.
source
"Yu Gong" in Shangshu: "Jue Gong only has five colors of soil."
Examples
I'll do it myself. I'll do it with you. (Chapter 94 of the romance of the gods by Xu Zhonglin of Ming Dynasty) my master is xuansun, the emperor of Xiaojing after King Jing of Zhongshan, who is now the emperor's uncle? (Chapter 54 of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty)
words whose meaning is similar
Divide the land
usage
It refers to the enfeoffment of vassals
Chinese PinYin : fēn máo liè tǔ
Split the soil
cast beans on grounds which are transformed by magic into soldiers. sǎ dòu chéng bīng
Six links and four breakthroughs. liù tōng sì pì