felicitous wish of making money
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ā OC á ij ì Nb ǎ o, which means that in ancient times, it was mostly used for social communication, and now it refers to attracting wealth to get rich. It's from falling mulberry.
Idiom explanation
In ancient times, it was mostly used for social communication, conveying feelings, expressing good wishes for good luck, eliminating evil and avoiding evil, and pursuing a happy life, reflecting the ancient folk customs and customs. Most of them are round coins with square holes, and the common face inscriptions are "recruit wealth and treasure, ten thousand taels of gold", "recruit wealth and treasure, ten thousand taels of gold, lion dance by Hu people" and so on.
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, the second discount of Liu Tangqing's "falling mulberry" is: "to attract wealth and treasure, to achieve good fortune, and to keep the whole family safe."
Discrimination of words
[synonym]: get rich, congratulations get rich [antonym]; make trouble, make things worse
Idiom usage
The example of a big tree strikes roots deeply. It is nourished by the essence of the sun and moon. This is the shaking of Qian Shu.
Chinese PinYin : zhāo cái jìn bǎo
felicitous wish of making money
hit on a good idea in a moment of desperation. qíng jí shēng zhì