Joke Collection Website - Talk about mood - Poetry describing a simple home

Poetry describing a simple home

1. Poems about simplicity

Poems about simplicity 1. Words to describe simplicity

Beigongfeishi: refers to the simplicity of the palace and the meager food. In the old days, it was used to praise the imperial court for its merits of thrift.

Pimen Penghu: a door made of firewood, branches, etc. Describes a simple residence and a difficult life.

皚路蓝丝:皚路: a diesel engine; 皚路続: rags. Driving a simple car and wearing tattered clothes to open up the mountains and forests. Describe the hardships of starting a business.

皚门guidou:皚门:Chaimen (a door made of bamboo sticks or branches). Guidou: A Gui-shaped door opening below the upper tip. The living quarters are described as extremely crude. It used to refer to the residence of the poor.

筚门boudoir:筚men: a fence made of wattle or bamboo to make a door; 第: leading to the "Dou", a small house next to the door. Chaimen small house is a metaphor for the poor people's simple residence.

筚门平屋: Describes the simple houses where poor people live.

Not sheltered from wind and rain: covered: covered. It cannot protect you from wind and rain. Describes a dilapidated house.

Candle board bed: refers to a very simple candle stand made of wood. Describes a clean and simple life style.

Between thorns: thorns: the roof of reeds; thorns: thorns. Describes the simple housing of poor people.

Fei Shi Beigong: Fei: meager; Bei: low. The food is meager and the palace is simple. It means not paying attention to enjoyment but working hard to cure.

Negiguo Qiongxiang: Negiguo: backed by the outer city; Qiongxiang: a simple alley. It is a metaphor for living in a remote place and coming from a poor family.

One rafter and one tile: ① One rafter and one tile. ② Refers to simple houses.

Hanging a mat as a door: refers to the hermit’s residence. It also describes poverty or poor living conditions.

Hengmen Guidou: Hengmen: a crossbar is used as a door; Guidou: a Guiyu-shaped hole is dug in the wall as a window. The residence is described as extremely crude.

Hengmen Shenxiang: Hengmen: a horizontal wooden door, referring to a simple place; Shenxiang: refers to a deserted alley. A rough, remote place.

Jisu Cuikuan: Su: firewood; Lei: overlapping; Kuan: clods of soil. Stacked firewood and overlapping clods of soil. The place where you live is described as very simple.

To make do with something simple: to make do with something; to make do with something simple; to make do with something simple. The original intention is to stick to the original simplicity without seeking improvement. Later, he decided to make do with the primitive conditions.

Jingchai cloth jacket: Jing: the name of a shrub; Chai: women’s hair ornaments. The branches of thorns are used as hairpins, and the coarse cloth is used as clothing. Describes women's clothing as simple and shabby.

Jingchai skirt cloth: Jing: the name of a shrub; Chai: women’s hair accessories. The thorn branches are the hairpins, and the coarse cloth is the skirt. Describes women's clothing as simple and shabby.

empty room: empty house; empty room: simple thatched hut. Described as poor, living in dilapidated and crude houses.

Accumulating blocks and accumulating su: Overlapping clods of soil and piled firewood. The place where you live is described as very simple.

Lisujibu: Overlapping soil clods and piled firewood. The place where you live is described as very simple. Same as "accumulating blocks and accumulating su".

Shabby house and empty hall: simple house, empty main hall. Describe the scene of poverty, decay and desolation.

2. Sentences that describe the house as being very simple and shabby

Ancient Chinese sentences:

1. It is raining and windy, and there is no cover.

Source: Tang Dynasty Han Yu's "Stele Facing the Sea Temple"

Interpretation: Rain leaks from the top of the house, wind leaks from the sides, and there is no cover on the top. Describes a house that is dilapidated and cannot protect against wind and rain.

2. The top is leaking and the bottom is wet, sitting on the back and stringing the string.

From "Zhuangzi Rang Wang" by Zhuangzi during the Warring States Period

Interpretation: Rain leaked from the roof, and the ground was wet. There were no chairs or stools, so I could only sit on the ground and play the strings. piano. Describes a dilapidated house that cannot protect against wind and rain.

3. The high autumn wind howls in August and rolls up the triple thatch on my house.

Source: "Song of Thatched House Broken by the Autumn Wind" by Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty

Interpretation In August, the autumn was deep, and the strong wind howled, and the strong wind swept away several layers of thatch on my roof.

4. Wenjun died at night and ran to Xiangru, but Xiangru and he galloped back to Chengdu, where they only stood on four walls.

Source: "Historical Records: Biography of Sima Xiangru" by Sima Qian of the Western Han Dynasty

Explanation Zhuo Wenjun returned to Chengdu with Sima Xiangru overnight. When he arrived at Xiangru's home, he found that the home was poor, with no furniture and only surrounding areas. wall.

5. There is no drying place for the leak at the bedside, and the rain has not stopped.

Source: "Song of Thatched House Broken by the Autumn Wind" by Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty

Meaning: When it rains, the roof leaks. There is no dry place in the house, and the rainwater on the roof is like twine. leak downward.

Modern sentences:

1. In a very simple farmer's rental house, there lived a young man. His room was very simple, with only necessary daily necessities in it. Apart from a large bed, the only valuable thing was the old computer in front of his window.

2. When I looked at the house carefully again, it looked even more weathered. The rusty iron fence seemed to be about to peel off at the slightest touch. The white walls have long since turned yellow and black. Standing in this familiar corner always brings back memories of the past.

3. I saw an old house, an ancient brick wall, covered with patterned wall bricks and withered creeping plants.

4. I remember my grandmother once told me that before I was born, she lived in an old house. The old house was dirty and messy, and it was passed down from generation to generation. But the room layout is extremely small. There is only one room for the family, where they eat and sleep.

5. As soon as you enter the house, there is a patio dedicated to washing clothes, and the house is on the right. When I arrived at the small house, I only saw a shabby TV set, a table and a few chairs inside. It was really shabby.

6. Grandma lived in that dilapidated old house. She said that living alone was much more comfortable than living with us. However, when it rained in her house, it rained heavily outside and drizzled inside. When her father saw this, he asked her many times to move in with her, but she didn't know if she would insist on it. Ken, my father had to help grandma repair the house again and again.

7. The house is empty when people leave. The crooked house is in dilapidated condition and no smoke rises.

8. People in my hometown used to live in bungalows, and some people lived in thatched houses. The short houses were dilapidated and dilapidated. When winter came, the biting cold wind blew in, making it as cold as an ice cellar. Very few people live in brick houses, and black smoke rising from the roofs fills the sky, making people feel suffocated.

9. The floors of my old house are all paved with bricks, but on the bricks directly facing the eaves, you will see water holes with different depths on each brick. .

10. We followed our aunt to a dilapidated old house with four or five rooms in a row and two floors. The rooms on the ground floor were nearly meters long made of stones, with earthen walls above them. The stone has turned a bit black, the earthen walls are mottled, as if telling the story of the age, and some of the doors are gone. We carefully climbed up the crooked wooden stairs. The walls of the room on the second floor were made of wooden boards and were all black.

3. Idioms describing a simple environment

[The Bird's Nest] is a metaphor for a simple cottage.

[Snail House with Jing Fei] A house like a snail shell with a door made of wattle sticks. Describes a very simple and small house. Fei: door.

[Earth steps thatched house] Earth steps, thatched house. A metaphor for poor housing.

[Zhi Chu Cheng Men] describes the house as simple and simple.

[Sanghu Renshu] Use mulberry branches as the door and wooden strips as the pivot. Describes a simple residence and a poor family.

[Sanghuhuanshu] Use mulberry branches as the door and wooden strips as the pivot. Describes a simple residence and a poor family.

[Penghu Chaimen] A door made of firewood, branches, etc. Describes a simple residence and a difficult life.

[Maoci Earth Steps] A thatched roof and mud steps. Describes a simple house or a frugal life.

[Tuchimaoci] is a metaphor for poor housing. Same as "earth-stepped hut".

[thatched house Penghu] Mao: Thatch; Peng: Flying Peng, the name of grass. Thatched house. The housing is described as extremely poor.

[hanging a mat as a door] refers to the hermit’s residence. It also describes poverty or poor living conditions.

[cumulative pieces accumulate su] Overlapping soil clods and piled firewood. The place where you live is described as very simple.

[Ximenpeng Lane] describes the place where you live is poor and simple. Same as "Ximen Qiongxiang".

[Leisuji blocks] Overlapping soil blocks and piles of firewood. The place where you live is described as very simple. Same as "accumulating blocks and accumulating su".

[Ximen Qiongxiang] describes the place where you live is poor and simple.

Also known as "Xi Menpeng Lane".

[Rope pivot urn] Rope pivot: Use a rope to tie the door instead of the hinge. The housing conditions are described as very poor. Mostly refers to poor people. Also known as "urn rope pivot".

[Pengmen Juhu] describes the simple houses where poor people live.

[Hengmenpihu] A house made of branches, grass, etc. Describes the simple houses where poor people live.

[One rafter and one tile] ①One rafter and one tile. ② Refers to simple houses.

[Hengmen Shenxiang] Hengmen; wood placed horizontally as a door refers to a simple place. Deep alley: refers to a deserted alley. A simple, remote, deserted place.

[Thatched hut with rafters] refers to simple accommodation.

[Begongfeishi] means that the palace is simple and the food is meager. In the old days, it was used to praise the imperial court for its merits of thrift.

[Just make it simple because of its shabby appearance] Stupid: shabby; Jiu: Make do with it. The original intention is to stick to the original simplicity without seeking improvement. Later, he decided to make do with the primitive conditions.

[Still crude and simple] Keep simple because of the crudeness. Refers to relying on the original simple conditions to do things.

[Sangshu Wengfu] Shu: the pivot on the door; Wengfu: a simple window. Using mulberry trees as door shafts and earthen jars as windows is a metaphor for a poor home.

[皚路蓝丝]皚路: a diesel engine; 皚路蓝丝: rags. Driving a simple car and wearing tattered clothes to open up the mountains and forests. Describe the hardships of starting a business.

[Taipun and ladle in shabby alleys] Jiao: simple and narrow; Tao: a round bamboo vessel used for serving rice in ancient times. They live in shabby alleys, eat with baskets and drink from ladles. Describes life as extremely poor.

4. What are the poems about poverty?

1. It is difficult to grow up without poverty, and you will be naive without fighting.

Translation: It is difficult to become a responsible person if you have not experienced poverty before. If you do not experience poverty, you will always be naive.

2. Scholars have never been poor since ancient times, and their literary talents are uniform throughout the world. - "Scholars have never been poor since ancient times" by Huang Jingren of the Qing Dynasty

Translation: Scholars have never been poor since ancient times, and they write it down His literary talents will be shared by everyone in the world.

3. If you are poor and talk about yourself, what will happen if you have no responsibility? - The third poem of "Lide New Residence" by Mengjiao of Tang Dynasty

Translation: Keep yourself poor, your quality and What will happen to responsibility?

4. I would rather be poor and enjoy myself than be rich and worry. - Shi Daoyuan's "Jingde Chuan Leng Lu"

Translation: I would rather be poor and enjoy myself than be poor. There's dirty money to worry about.

5. Be a farmer in the morning, and ascend to the emperor's hall in the evening. A general has no talent at all, but a man should strengthen himself! ——"Poem of the Child Prodigy"

Translation: When you were young, you were a cowherd in the fields. When you were old, you entered the emperor's court. Princes, generals and ministers did not differentiate between birth. As a man, you should strive for self-improvement.

6. There are tens of millions of vast mansions, and all the poor people in the world will be happy - Du Fu's "Song of Thatched Cottage Broken by the Autumn Wind"

Translation: I hope there are tens of millions of vast mansions. room, making all the poor people in the world happy to have a place to live.

7. Poverty and lowliness cannot shake one's determination - "Mencius, Duke Teng Wen" by Zou Mengke during the Warring States Period

Translation: Poverty and lowliness cannot shake one's determination.

8. Don’t be obsessed with wealth, and don’t worry about poverty. - "The Biography of Mr. Wuliu" by Tao Yuanming

Translation: Don’t worry about poverty and sorrow, don’t worry about wealth. Hasty pursuit.

Appreciation: The main text can be divided into four sections. The first section starts from the beginning to "Because I thought it was called Yan", explaining the origin of the nickname "Mr. Wuliu" and starting with the topic. "I don't know who the gentleman is," is the first sentence at the beginning of the article, which excludes this gentleman from the famous family. Not only is his origin and place of origin unknown, but "his surname is also unknown." Mr. Wu Liu is an anonymous person. people. The Jin Dynasty was very particular about family status, but Mr. Wuliu went against this trend, which implies that Mr. Wuliu was a hermit. "There are five willow trees beside the house, so I thought it was called Yan", so I randomly chose a name. Mr. Wu Liu not only kept his name anonymous, but also did not pay attention to the surname at all. In the words of Zhuangzi, "the name is the guest of reality", which is irrelevant. But maybe the reason why he likes the Wuliu tree is that there are no peaches and plums near Mr. Wuliu's house, and there are only a few willow trees. This is consistent with the "circulation blocking Xiao Ran" written later.

Mr. Wuliu's house is simple and he lives in poverty. This Wuliu tree has a quiet, elegant and simple color. Taking Wu Liu as his nickname also shows Mr. Wu Liu's character.