Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - What are the ancient names for making friends?

What are the ancient names for making friends?

What is a friend? As the ancients said, classmates (teachers) call friends, and comrades call friends. The ancients had many appellations to express their relationship.

Friendship between cloth and clothes: friends of ordinary people. Historical Records Biography of Lian Po and Lin Xiangru: I thought that the friendship between cloth and clothes had not been bullied, and the situation was great? Embarrassed friend: a friend who doesn't change his mind even if he beheads. There's a saying in the Biography of Lian Po and Lin Xiangru: Every pawn is happy, and every sentence is clumsy. A friend with a tight neck can also be described as a friend of life and death.

Friends who never turn their backs on each other: it shows that they have the same heart and feelings. Master Zhuangzi: Three people smile at each other, so they are friends.

The intersection of stick and mortar: pestle, wooden stick, mortar and stone mortar. It means not to be too poor to make friends, which is also called making friends. Textbook "The History of the Later Han Dynasty and the Biography of Wu Hu": At that time, Shamu, a public official, visited imperial academy and was penniless, so he became a guest servant and borrowed a sum of money for Wei. He was shocked and decided to give it to.

The turn of the car and the hat: Taiping Yu Lan is quoted from the local custom: the more vulgar, the friendlier, that is, take off the towel on your head, untie the five-foot knife (waist) to make friends with it, kneel down to your wife and treat them with courtesy. I wish you: although you are riding in Dai Li, I will pick you up the day after tomorrow. This kind of friend, no different from the nobility, has a profound friendship.

Forgetting the turn of the year: friends with different ages and generations but deep friendship. The Biography of He Xun in Southern History: The weak champion, the scholar in the state capital and Fan Yun in Nanxiang saw its countermeasures and rewarded them greatly, because they forgot to make friends.

A bamboo-horse friendship: a friend who likes to make friends when he was a child. "The Biography of Ji Guo in the Later Han Dynasty" wrote: From beginning to end, hundreds of children rode bamboo horses to meet them at the pass. There is a line in Du Mu's poem "Du Qiuniang" in the Tang Dynasty: gradually throwing bamboo and horse plays and dancing chickens to describe children's innocence and playfulness.

In The Story of a Cockcrow, the ancients divided friends into four categories: moral confrontation, negligence and fear of friends; Priorities can be * * *, life and death can be entrusted, and so can bosom friends: sweet talk, games, friends; Interests compete, sufferings depend on each other, and thieves are friends.