Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - Is the word "lottery" related to Hongyan? How did this idiom come from?

Is the word "lottery" related to Hongyan? How did this idiom come from?

Haocai has something to do with Hongyan. "Good luck" can also be translated into "good luck" to describe good luck. Hongyan is a beautiful bird. It can fly high and far. In ancient times, people regarded Hongyan as a good omen, so there was "good luck".

Hong can be divided into two kinds of animals, one is the swan and the other is the swan. These two animals are beautiful in appearance and people like them very much. The ancients often used their own feathers as decorations to show their dignity. Hongyan and Honghu fly high and far, so the metaphor is ambitious. The ancients believed that swans had a "universal heart" before they were full-fledged, and it was wiser to compare people with swans than nature. Before the Chen Sheng Uprising, the famous exclamation "Swallows know the ambition of swans!" It is a true portrayal of this great ambition.

For this reason, the words used in the "red" group are mostly commendatory words: Ming is a fascinating realm; "Hung-chien" is a metaphor for being promoted or getting better; Hong Ju describes that swans fly high and far. "Laihong" represents a letter; "Scholar" is a learned scholar; "Masterpiece" is a masterpiece; "Hongyou" refers to the inheritance of emperors, so when used as an adjective, "Hong" means great and prosperous, and "good fortune" means full of luck. This is the correct solution of the word "Fu".

Hongyan is now listed as an endangered species. Hongyan is the common ancestor of domestic geese at present, and it is also an important traditional hunting object for our people for a long time. It used to have a large population. Lakes, ponds, rivers, marshes and their adjacent areas mainly exist in open plains and plain grasslands, especially where lakes are close to dense aquatic plants on the plains, and sometimes in mountain plains and river valleys. In winter, they inhabit large lakes, reservoirs, coasts, estuaries and bays and their nearby grasslands and farmland.