Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - No rice noodles, no chickens and ducks, no fish and no money. How do the poor and the rich punctuate this sentence?

No rice noodles, no chickens and ducks, no fish and no money. How do the poor and the rich punctuate this sentence?

Poor people: no rice and flour, no chickens and ducks, no fish, no money.

For the rich: noodles are ok without rice; Without chickens, ducks can do it; Without fish, meat is ok; Without money, money will do.

Allusion: In ancient times, there was a scholar who wanted to recruit students. He doesn't accept money from poor children, but he wants to give many rewards to rich children. He posted a notice that said, "No rice, noodles, chickens, ducks, fish and money." When a child from a poor family comes, he is a kind of reading; When a rich boy comes, he is another way of reading.

Extended data

In ancient Chinese literature, punctuation marks are generally not added, but sentences are broken through language sense, mood auxiliary words and grammatical structure. ("sentence reading symbol" is added to the article: a period means the end of the sentence; Reading the number seems to be the current pause, which means the pause of tone), which often leads to ambiguity and misunderstanding of the words used in the article.

For example, Zhao Tianyang, a poet in the Qing Dynasty, has seven ways to explain the sentence "Stay on rainy days and stay in the future" (another way of saying it is that I am a guest, not me).

There were no common punctuation marks in ancient Chinese, and19th century began to use it. As a sentence. In the 8th century, Japan used kickbacks and training points as punctuation system.