Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - a two-part allegorical saying

a two-part allegorical saying

There is also a homophonic two-part allegorical saying, which adds homophonic elements to the previous strong foundation. take for example

Nephew plays lanterns-as usual (uncle)

Confucius was moved-all lost (book)

Burn charcoal with a flagpole (alas, enjoy it)

Shut the knife in the cesspit-literature (smell) is not good, and martial arts (dance) is not good.

Here are some common two-part allegorical sayings:

The dumb eats Huang Lian: I can't tell you how difficult it is.

Scholar meets soldier: The reason is unknown.

Bachelor teaches boys: cheap and greedy.

Money for a bachelor: once lost, there is no turning back.

Blind people eat soup: know what they are.

Monk Zhang Er: I don't know.

Narcissus doesn't bloom: play dumb.

Nephew plays lanterns: the same as before (uncle)

Confucius was moved: I lost all my books.

Courtesy in return: shameless

Clay figurine opens the door: a man who lives his own life

Stealing the chicken and not eating the rice: after eating the rice, it didn't take advantage, but it suffered a loss.

Throwing bombs in the toilet: arousing people's feces (anger)

Death married a daughter: a ghost wanted it.

The following are common two-part allegorical sayings in Cantonese:

Cowhide lantern: the focus is extremely unclear

Chopping wood under the bed: beating the board, that is, making trouble.

Wife's burden: Yin Gong, that is, pity.

Husband fanned the fan: bleak (wife is cold), just pitiful.

Cyclops's wife: Take a look at the sun.

Winter salted duck: get a word

Blowing up ghosts overnight: no anger

Sweet potato falls into air furnace: stew

Elemene in wet water: pumping water at both ends

Watermelon hits the dog: I didn't see it.

Open henhouse: enter by yourself

White eel on the beach: Dead or dead.

Burning flagpole: there is a long row of charcoal (sigh)

Chaozhou Music: Take care.

If you have no bullets, you are impeccable.

African monks: Begging people to hate (black monks) is annoying.

Fish people take a bath/fish people wash themselves: there is no breath.

Bow ruler: measure water

Aram marries Ali: Tired of fighting.

Too cm pork: everyone has a share.

New Year's Eve fried dumpling: Everyone has me.

Old mention and buried knot: count

Mongolian Khan-

Kublai Khan: I was hit in the ass (suddenly = ass; Fierce = cracked)

Swallow gold to destroy the song dynasty (gold = money for food; Song =? ? = dish)

Two-part allegorical saying: Let go of the baggage and chat-two-part allegorical saying

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The origin of xiehouyu

Two-part allegorical saying is a special language form created by China people in their life practice. Generally, it consists of two parts, the first part is an image metaphor, like a riddle, and the second part is an explanation and explanation, like a riddle, which is very natural and appropriate. In a certain language environment, you can understand and guess the original intention by saying the first half sentence and "resting" the second half sentence, so it is called two-part allegorical saying.

The name "Xiehouyu" first appeared in the Tang Dynasty. The so-called "Wu Hou of Zheng" (a kind of "Hou Hou" poem) has been mentioned in the biography of the old Tang Dynasty. However, as a language form and phenomenon, it appeared as early as the pre-Qin period. For example, The Warring States Policy. Chu Ce IV: "It's not too late to mend." In other words, it is not too late to repair the sheepfold after the sheep is lost. This is the two-part allegorical saying we saw today.

Two-part allegorical sayings, with distinctive national characteristics, rich flavor of life and intriguing humor, are loved by the broad masses of the people. Although ancient two-part allegorical sayings are rare in written records, they must have been circulated among the people. For example, Qian Daxin's "Constant Yan Lu" contains: "Sending goose feathers a thousand miles away, light and heavy, is also contained in the Song Dynasty." This kind of two-part allegorical saying has been used to this day.

Xiehouyu is one of the most popular traditional languages and cultures in China. It is humorous and reflects the intelligence and wisdom of the working people in China. The biggest feature of two-part allegorical sayings is homophonic and figurative, such as "clay bodhisattva crossing the river is difficult to protect himself", "rolling pin blows fire-I don't know anything" and "my nephew plays lanterns-it's still the same". Another important feature of two-part allegorical sayings is knowing.

The language of two-part allegorical sayings is humorous and often makes people smile after reading it. If telling jokes makes you laugh, then two-part allegorical sayings will make your mouth slightly upturned and secretly scream. I hope readers of Joke Humor-can get all-round smiles at all levels.

About learning proverbs

1. Knowledge is the torch of wisdom.

2. read a book and increase your wisdom.

If you don't eat, you will be hungry, and if you don't read, you will be stupid.

4. Don't go forward, don't know how far it is; If you don't study hard, you won't understand the truth.

5. Without pruning, trees will not grow straight; People are ignorant without learning.

6. It is better to dress yourself with pearls than to enrich yourself with knowledge.

7. Bees pick flowers to make sweet, while people read books to tell the truth.

8. Labor is the source of knowledge; Knowledge is the guide of life.

9. Knowledge is the torch of wisdom.

10. The sword will rust if it is not ground; People should fall behind if they don't study.

1 1. Flourishing seedlings need water; Growing teenagers need to learn.

12. The stars make the sky dazzling; Knowledge makes people grow their talents.

13. Light candles for clarity and read books for reason.

14. Food supplements the body and books enrich the wisdom.

15. There are three most precious things in the world-knowledge, food and friendship. (Burmese proverb)

16. Books that are not read are like waste paper. (English proverb)

17. It is better to accumulate gold and silver than to accumulate knowledge. (European proverb)

Proverbs about hygiene

1. Diseases spread through the mouth.

Proverbs about character:

1, total loss, moderate benefit.

I save myself three times a day.

Virtue is brave, and kindness is never afraid. British playwright Shakespeare.

4, distance knows horsepower, and people will see it for a long time.

I only know that the so-called morality means that you feel good afterwards, and the so-called immorality means that you feel bad afterwards. (Hemingway, American writer)

6, remain uncorrupted and upright.

7. Learning comes from diligence, and wealth comes from thrift.

8. Qi Xin's ants eat deer and magpies catch tigers.

9. The less people think, the more they talk.

10, one mouth and two skins, it's all your fault.

Proverbs about natural phenomena:

1. Swallows fly very low, and it's going to rain.

Proverbs about agriculture

Good health, big ears of grain, fat mother and fat son.

Farming is not afraid of much, and building a dam is not afraid of long.

One picks dung, the other picks grain.

The year of the ox and the year of the horse are good years for agriculture.

The wheat cover has three quilts, and the pillow is steamed bread to sleep.

A horse doesn't know its face, but a cow doesn't know its horns.