Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - What were the ancient people's honorifics for oxen?

What were the ancient people's honorifics for oxen?

Ancient people's honorifics for oxen included ugly ox, earth animal, ugandan, and shenniu. Ugandan often referred to plow oxen in general, and Shenniu referred to buffaloes. Alias for cows of different ages include calf, nondescript, nondescript, nondescript, nondescript, nondescript, nondescript, nondescript, nondescript, nondescript, nondescript, nondescript, nondescript, and so on. Calf means calf, nondescript means two-year-old cow, nondescript means three-year-old cow, nondescript means four-year-old cow, and descript means eight-year-old cow. The elegant name for a cow is eight hundred li. The origin of this elegant name is Xin Qiji's "Broken Formation. The Song of the Broken Formation.

Related Knowledge

The ox is hard-working and selfless, pulling carts and plowing fields, and has made great contributions to the development of agriculture, and the Chinese people not only love it, respect it, and worship it, but also give it a lot of interesting names. Ancient steed called barge, but the "Shishu Xinyi" said, Wang Junzi cattle, good at Mercedes-Benz, in the bet with Wang Wuzi, cattle galloped away, Wang Junzi name of the cattle for the "800 miles barge", which is also the later people on the cow's elegant name.

The Cow King Festival: a traditional festival of the Miao people, popular in Guizhou Qiannan Buyi and Miao Autonomous Prefecture on the first day of the tenth month of the lunar calendar. On this day, people don't let the cows work, every family kills chickens, plays poop, and feeds the cows early in the morning with poop or glutinous rice stirring fodder to show their sympathy. Some farmers also have to prepare burnt paper, chicken, incense, wine, etc. placed next to the cowshed to sacrifice the King Bull.