Wushan Luopu
Wushan Luopu (w ū sh ā NLU ò P ǔ), a Chinese word, refers to the goddess of Wushan and Luoshui.
Wushan Luopu
[Pinyin] W ū sh ā NLU ò P ǔ
[explanation] it refers to Wushan Goddess and Luoshui goddess, and it also refers to men's and women's tryst.
[source] Wushan: refers to the story of the meeting of the king of Chu and the goddess of Wushan in their dreams. Lop: the shore of the Luoshui river. Legend has it that there is a goddess of Luoshui. When Cao Zhi crossed Luoshui in the Wei Dynasty of the Three Kingdoms, he felt that Song Yu of Chu in the Warring States period had done something to the king and goddess of Chu, so he wrote the ode to Luoshen. Later, "Wushan" and "Luopu" were used together.
Wushan Luopu
officialdom is the natural outlet for good scholars - xué ér yōu zé shì
please a treacherous person sextually - yíng jiān mài qiào
an orphan-calf injures the nursing cow -- ingratitude - gū dú chù rǔ
see little of the world and hear little of what is going on outside - guǎ jiàn shǎo wén