Joke Collection Website - News headlines - Four-word idioms describing rural vegetable gardens

Four-word idioms describing rural vegetable gardens

1. Four words about the countryside: green water, Qianshan, small bridges and flowing water, beautiful scenery, curling kitchen smoke, silver waves in cotton fields, criss-crossing buildings, lush grass, birds and flowers, green grass, fresh air, wild flowers everywhere, all love and spring returns are full of flowers, spring flowers are in full bloom, flowers are red and green, and Liu Mei is brilliant. Men plow and women weave, chickens and dogs hear each other, the grass grows with warblers flying, the flowers are clustered, the smoke waves are vast, the birds are singing and the flowers are fragrant, the fields are thousands of miles away, the wheat waves are rolling, the rice fragrance is rich, the lake is faint, the fruits are fruitful, the water is clear, the harvest is in sight, the mountains are beautiful, the mountains are magnificent, and the peaches and willows are green.

2. There are 30 four-word words describing rural scenery, 1, and the grass is delicious.

The fragrant grass is delicious and colorful (selected from the Peach Blossom Garden), and the fragrant grass is bright and beautiful.

2. Beautiful and rich

The local scenery is beautiful, rich in products and rich in life.

3. Intensive cultivation

Intensive cultivation is the mode of agricultural production in ancient China, which means that more means of production, labor and technology are invested in a certain area of land for intensive cultivation in order to maximize the output per unit area.

4. The seedlings are oil green.

Green grass. Green wheat seedlings. Chinese name green oil mbth bright green pinyin lǜyóuyóu

Step 5 harvest

Harvest of five grains is an idiom in China, and its pinyin is wǔ gǔ, which means a good harvest in one year.

Extended data:

In Ci Yuan, villages are interpreted as places mainly engaged in agriculture, and their population distribution is more dispersed than that of towns. Some foreign scholars, represented by American scholar R D Rodfield, pointed out that "the countryside is a sparsely populated and relatively isolated place with agricultural production as the main economic base, which is basically similar to people's lives, but different from other parts of society, especially cities".

The countryside, sometimes called the countryside, is the general name of a kind of settlement where residents take agriculture as the basic content of their economic activities, also known as the countryside. Primitive tribes originated in the middle paleolithic period.

In the Neolithic Age, agriculture and animal husbandry began to separate, clans whose main livelihood was agriculture settled down, and real villages appeared.