Wen Zhaowu Mu
Wen Zhaowu mu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w é nzh ā ow ǔ m ù. It originally refers to the numerous descendants of King Wen, but later it is generally called offspring reproduction. It comes from the table of emperor yuan of Liang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the ancient patriarchal system, the ancestral temple was ranked in the middle, the following father and son were named Zhaomu, the left Zhao and the right mu. At the time of sacrifice, the descendants also saluted according to the order of Zhaomu. King Wen of Zhou was mu in Zhou, King Wu was Zhao, and King Cheng was mu.
Idiom usage
Chen Xuling of the Southern Dynasty's "Quanjin Liang Yuan Di Biao" said: "his literary style is clear and military, so is his tarsi; heaven and earth are successful, so are his achievements." Tang Yang Jiong's "Tang right general Wei Zhe Shendao stele": "Wen Zhao Wu Mu, Fang Jia Qi Qu; Prince Wang sun, Zhu Lun Hua Hu." Refer to "general textual research of literature · zongmiao I".
Chinese PinYin : wén zhāo wǔ mù
Wen Zhaowu Mu
eat and drink to the limit of one 's capacity. jiǔ zuì fàn bǎo
constant departure and reunion of friends. xuě zhōng hóng zhǎo
learn from others ' strong points and close the gap. qǔ cháng bǔ duǎn