wedding day
Auspicious day is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is j í R ì Li á ngsh í, which means auspicious day and good time. The same as "auspicious day". The source is water margin.
Entry
wedding day
Pinyin
jírìliángshí
Citation explanation
Lucky days, good times. The second chapter of Shi Naian's outlaws of the marsh in Ming Dynasty: he asked the Taoist priest to set up a fasting ceremony and spend his life beyond heaven. He made more than ten altars of good deeds, made great contributions to the Daoism, and chose a good time to go to the funeral. In the fourth chapter of Water Margin written by Shi Naian in Ming Dynasty, "the elder chose a good day and a good time to teach him to ring the bell and beat the drum, and then gathered the masses in the Dharma hall. Five or six hundred monks, all dressed in cassocks, went to the Dharma seat to make a ceremony and divided into two classes." Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty wrote the seventy first chapter of the outlaws of the Marsh: "Song Jiang picked the auspicious day and good time, burned a fire of incense, sang a drum, and gathered people in the hall." In the 56th chapter of Xu Zhonglin's Fengshen romance in the Ming Dynasty, Ziya said to his grandson, "how can I get married with Miss Deng at this auspicious day?" Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty wrote "awakening the world with constancy: exploring the God of Erlang in leather boots": "when the auspicious day is good, I'll make some incense gifts. I'll go to the Yousheng Zhenjun temple in the North Pole first, surrounded by two ladies in official and private bodies." The eighth chapter of Zeng Pu's the flowers of the evil sea: "it's time to send the number one scholar back to the first place. Let's get the boat back. It's a good time. It's not a place to play." Chapter 32: in less than three days, Caiyun decided to move into yanqingli at a good time.
Chinese PinYin : jí rì liáng shí
wedding day
When we see injustice, we will help each other. lù jiàn bù píng,bá dāo xiāng zhù
a thief in the family is difficult to detect. jiā zéi nán fáng
Remove the chaff and block the wind. pái kāng zhàng fēng
be helpless and in the greatest straits. jì qióng zhì jí
Keep one's salary and maintain one's friendship. chí lù yǎng jiāo
rise up upon hearing the crow of a rooster and practise with the sword. wén jī qǐ wǔ