Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Lucky day inquiry - How to explain "there are auspicious days, and Jinse is full of life"?

How to explain "there are auspicious days, and Jinse is full of life"?

"There are auspicious days, and last romance is always there" means that there are auspicious days all the time, and last romance is always there. For example, if you are in a good mood, when is the best time is the best moment.

Good day and auspicious day, an idiom in China, pinyin is liá ngché njí ri, which means a good time and a happy day. Now it is often used as a metaphor for good opportunities. From Qu Yuan's Nine Songs of the Eastern Emperor Taiyi in the Chu Ci of the Warring States Period: "The ecliptic is auspicious, and Mu will be happy with God."

Use: combined; Become an object.

Example: Shi Ming Nai 'an's "Water Margin" is the second time: "Gao Qiu has to be a captain, choose a good day and take office in the palace."

Jinse Nianhua, an idiom in China, is pronounced as jǐnsèniánhuá, which means youth. From Don Li Shangyin's "Jinse": "I want to know why my Jinse has fifty strings, each with a youthful interval."

Usage: as subject and object.