Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - The origin of the nickname Two Hundred and Five?
The origin of the nickname Two Hundred and Five?
A kind of saying: It comes from the story of the Warring States Period^_^
During the Warring States Period, there was a lobbyist named Su Qin. He wore the seal of the Six Kingdoms. He was very majestic for a while, but also He made many enemies and was eventually killed in Qi State. King Qi was very angry and wanted to avenge Su Qin, but he couldn't find the murderer for a while, so he thought of a plan to have Su Qin's head cut off from the body and hung on the city gate, with a notice posted next to it saying : "Su Qin is a traitor. If you kill him, I will receive a reward of a thousand taels of gold." As soon as the list was posted, four people claimed that they had killed Su Qin. King Qi said: "You are not allowed to pretend!" The four men all insisted that they did it. King Qi said: "1000 taels of gold, how much do you four get?" The four people replied in unison: "Two hundred and five for each person." King Qi slapped the table and said angrily: "Come here, push these four 'two hundred and five' out and kill them "The word "two hundred and five" has been passed down like this.
There is another kind: the origin of two hundred and five^_^
Once upon a time, there was a scholar who spent all his sleep and food studying hard to obtain fame, but he never passed the exam in his life, not even his son. None of them were born. In his later years, the old scholar was finally disheartened and indifferent to fame and fortune, so he was blessed with a son, and in his later years he had two daughters.
The scholar couldn't help but sigh with emotion when he recalled his life's successes and failures, so he named his two sons: one was called Chengshi and the other was called Banshi.
From then on, the scholar took classes behind closed doors at home and lived a harmonious life.
One day, the scholar told his wife: "I'm going to the market for a walk. You can supervise the two sons to write at home. The older one should write three hundred and the younger one should write two hundred."
After the scholar came back from the market, he asked his second son how he was studying at home. His wife replied: "I have written, but I have not succeeded enough and failed more than failed. Both of them are two hundred and five!"
Also~^_^ p>
Jing Zhaoyin, the "mayor" of Chang'an in the Tang Dynasty, was very powerful and had a huge honor guard when he went out on patrol. The official who opened the way at the front was originally a small official named Hedao Wubai. He held a long pole in his hand to drive away passers-by. Later, the number of Wu Bai increased to two, but the people in Chang'an did not call them two Wu Bai. Instead, they called them Wu Bai. So a single Wu Bai was jokingly called Two Hundred and Five, because each of them held a long pole in their hands. , so they are also called Erganzi. Today, two hundred and five and two poles are synonymous with reckless, rude, and rude people.
A scientifically based one~
The more well-founded statement comes from China’s monetary measurement unit. In the past, 10 taels of silver was equivalent to an ingot, 500 taels was equivalent to a letter, and 250 taels was a "half seal", which is homophonic to "half crazy". As time went by, people gradually used "two hundred and five" (half-mad) to describe those stupid and reckless people.
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