Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Almanac inquiry - Why, Jin Kemu? Muktu? Soil-confined water

Why, Jin Kemu? Muktu? Soil-confined water

Metal products can be drilled to get water, and so can wooden barrels. Let me teach you:

Shuimuketu, I read an almanac.

The materialism of ancient people was relatively backward. They saw the metal burn to make it melt, so there was fire to kill gold, and then gold gave birth to water to kill the fire.

Why, Jin Kemu?

Metal is harder than wood, so those ancient people like chopping wood and cutting trees.

Why Muketu?

Seeds break through the constraints of the land and grow, so they can be used as soil.

Why is water like fire?

Think for yourself.

Why did Huo fight?

Metal is not very hard, but it won't work when it meets fire. The edges are soft and eventually melt.

Why Tucker water?

When you water the land, you will find that the water sinks into the soil and disappears.

Why, aquatic wood?

Ancient people knew that plants could only grow by watering.

Why does wood make a fire?

Ancient people used wood to make a fire.

Why was fire born?

Ancient alchemists, when making alchemy, left residue after chemical reaction, and burnt things turned into residue, which was soil.

Why is gold native?

When ancient people smelt metals, they used dirt and stones picked up on the ground to refine metals. What's more, ancient people used sand to sift gold, didn't you know?

Gold produces water. Of course, metal is heated and melted into fluid.