Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - Please tell me the purpose of 40 kinds of bricks! Thank you for your questions.

Please tell me the purpose of 40 kinds of bricks! Thank you for your questions.

This is a topic of Zhixing Competition. Bricks have one hundred uses. Please think of me. I think I'm about seventy now. 1, building a house 2, making a promise (see the lion's roar) 3, weighing things (such as elephants in Cao Chong) 4, padding feet in rainy days 5, hitting people 6, making pillows 7, padding bed legs 8, attracting jade (throwing bricks to attract jade) 9, metaphorically being stupid (bricks and brains) 10, and making feet droop 60. Then practice marksmanship) 13, stage background 14, unlocking 15, breaking the window 16, filling the pit 17, throwing one in when others are standing in front of the cesspit, hurting people 18, and. A young lady eloped at night, throwing bricks as a code word. Leg press 3 1 in sit-ups, used to name (I used this name once) 32. Used to embed murals 33. The soldiers practiced their military posture. Used to knock music 35. Used to hide things (such as hollow bricks). Used to shelter from the rain (on the head when it rains) 37. For paperweights 38. Used for painting. Used to play magic (such as drilling holes in bricks with fingers) 40, used as a blackboard to write on it 4 1, used for counting 42, used as a pen to write and draw 43, used as a flowerpot to raise flowers (referring to hollow bricks) 44, used to do divergent thinking problems in this competition; 45. Used to pretend to be a bomb to scare the enemy. 46. Used for sauna (heating bricks and watering them). 47. Used to pick up floating objects in the water (like crows drinking water to raise the water level). 48. Used to pave the road. 49. Use it to catch sparrows (build a sieve with bricks). 50. Children can mix wine to make furniture. 5 1. Keep balance when picking things. 53. used to knock on the door. Knocking with bricks is loud. Used as chess pieces (blue bricks and red bricks, such as rice chess and tiger chess when I was young) 55. Used as currency (such as gold bricks) 56. Brick carving 57. Used for fixation (if a person can't find wood after a fracture, tie a brick) 58. Temporarily used as a table tennis bat 59. Used for wind protection (the window is broken and blocked with bricks) 60. Used for anti-skid (for example, put a piece on the rear wheel of a car) 6 1, used as a pendant for fishing nets 62, used as a table tennis net 63, used as a whetstone 64, coaxed the fish to "throw them into the net" 65, built a chimney to "let the smoke spread to both sides" 66, described the old-fashioned mobile phone (there is not a saying that we should hang a portable mobile phone around our neck) 67. Picking up two bricks can be used as a football goal. I used it at school and it still works. 68. Used as an experiment: Homer Fritz once experimented with two impermeable bricks, representing two impermeable rock layers. When water was injected between two bricks, he observed what happened to the bricks above. 69. Use it as toilet paper in an emergency (hehe, I have seen children use stones, so since they use stones, they should also use bricks). Used to guide the way (in the game maze, a few bricks are often placed on the ground as directions)