Shuxiu Palace
Shuxiu palace is a Chinese idiom, pronounced sh ǔ Xi ù g ō NGT í ng, which means that after the death of the Western Zhou Dynasty, all the old ancestral temples and palaces were the land of millet. Later, it was used as a word of lamenting the subjugation of the country.
Idiom explanation
It is said that after the death of the Western Zhou Dynasty, all the old ancestral temples and palaces were the land of corn. Later, it was used as a word of lamenting the subjugation of the country.
Idioms and allusions
Idiom source:
1. That millet leaves, that millet seedling. I'm all over the place. Book of songs Wang Feng Shu Li
2. The wheat show is getting better and better. He's too cunning to be nice to me. Sima Qian's "historical records · song Weizi family" in the Western Han Dynasty
Example of idiom: Ji Chunshui is still handed down to Jin Dynasty, and Shu Xiugong court is in favor of Zhou Dynasty. On Yue Fei's tijumagang in Song Dynasty
Idiom story
It is said that after the fall of the Western Zhou Dynasty, doctor Zhou traveled a long way to the capital of the Western Zhou Dynasty. When he saw that the ancestral temples and palaces in the past had become fields full of millet, he felt sad and filled with emotion. So he wrote a poem "Shuli". Later, when Wei Zi met the king of Zhou, he passed by the ruins of Yin Dynasty and saw that the palace was destroyed and full of corn. He was very sad, so he wrote a song named "Mai Xiu".
words whose meaning is similar
Millet leaves wheat show, old palace millet
usage
Used as an object or attribute; used to mourn the loss of a country.
Chinese PinYin : shǔ xiù gōng tíng
Shuxiu Palace
each family is provided for and each person is well-fed and well-clothed. rén jǐ jiā zú