Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Drunk traditional Chinese characters

Drunk traditional Chinese characters

"Drunk" is a traditional Chinese character.

First, the basic explanation:

Drunk and unconscious: ~ Han. ~ ghosts. ~ meaning. ~ boxing (a kind of boxing that highlights staggered drunkenness in footwork). ~ Live, dream and die. ~ Weng's original intention is not wine.

Indulge in, indulge in: ~ heart. Sink. Tao ~ (contentedly immersed in a certain realm or ideological activity)

Brewed with wine: ~ jujube. ~ shrimp. ~ crab.

Second, the word group:

be bright in the eye

Drunk. Tang Du Fu's poem "Rain Over Su Dou": "Muddy mash must be in sight, and you are drunk." "The Scholars" goes back to the third chapter: "The old gentleman is a heavy drinker, so it is better to take a midnight snack on the same day and in the evening, and get drunk today."

Drunk

Indulge in poetry. Song Mei Yao Chen's "Yi Yun and Uncle Yong advised to drink, don't recite poems": "Only when you are drunk, you don't know anything."

Slightly drunk [Qi Minzu]

Slightly drunk. Yu Dafu's Miscellaneous Poems from Chaos (V): "Even with lanling wine to relieve his worries, why did he lose his concubine when he was drunk?"

Drunk dream

It means people are drunk as a dream. Tang Li wrote a poem called "Helin Monastery": "I was in a daze all day, and suddenly I heard that I was trying my best to climb the mountain." Song Sushi's "Two Rhymes of Hu Wanfu": "When you are young, you can talk about being drunk all your life with a glass of wine." Yuan Luzhi's "Yue Qu Orange Cup": "When wine enters poetry, you wake up drunk and your teeth and cheeks are still fragrant." In the Qing Dynasty, Chen Kangqi's Tales of Lang Qian, Volume 4: "Famous ministers and generals rode dustpans in succession, while those who were drunk and dreamy offered sacrifices."

be bright in the eye

With a little drunk. Tang Li and "Youth Music": "When Lu Lang is drunk, she will get treasure, gold and jade."