Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Almanac inquiry - What are the sentences describing the "Zodiac"?

What are the sentences describing the "Zodiac"?

The sentences describing the "Zodiac" are:

It's still late at night, and people are still watching the lights;

The cow was sleepy and hungry and rested in the mud outside the south gate;

Explore the tiger's den into the dumpling palace and exhale into Bai Hong;

The male rabbit's feet are confusing, and the female rabbit's eyes are blurred; When two rabbits walk on the ground, Ann can tell whether I am a male or a female.

Hongyan flies too long, and ichthyosaurs dive into the water;

Mountain dancing silver snake, the original wax elephant, wants to compare with the weather;

Then he disappeared at the corner of the pass, leaving only hoofprint;

Cook a sheep, kill a cow, increase my appetite, and let me drink 300 bowls at once! ;

Wash the monkey and wear the crown, know small and seek strong;

The cock sings the world white;

If a girl has a home, so will a chicken and a dog.

I will definitely put Du Wen on my lap and enjoy cooking pigs and sheep in my neighbor's house.

Extended data:

The Zodiac, also known as the Zodiac, is twelve kinds of animals in China that match the twelve earthly branches according to the year of birth, including rats, cows, tigers, rabbits, dragons, snakes, horses, sheep, monkeys, chickens, dogs and pigs.

The origin of the zodiac is related to animal worship. According to the records of Qin bamboo slips unearthed in Yunmeng Shuihudi, Hubei Province and Fangmatan, Tianshui, Gansu Province, there was a relatively complete zodiac system in the pre-Qin period. The earliest handed down document that recorded the China Zodiac, which is the same as modern times, was Lun Heng written by Wang Chong in the Eastern Han Dynasty.

The zodiac is an intuitive representation of the twelve earthly branches, namely, Zi (mouse), Ugly (ox), Yin (tiger), Mao (rabbit), Chen (dragon), Si (snake), Wu (horse), Wei (sheep), Shen (monkey), You (chicken) and Xu (chicken). In modern times, more people regard the zodiac as the mascot of the Spring Festival and become a symbol of entertainment and cultural activities.

As a long-standing symbol of folk culture, the zodiac has left a large number of poems, Spring Festival couplets, paintings, calligraphy and paintings and folk arts and crafts that depict the image and symbolic significance of the zodiac. Apart from China, many countries in the world issue stamps of the zodiac during the Spring Festival to express their wishes for the New Year in China.