Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - What are the proverbs about mangoes?

What are the proverbs about mangoes?

Mango proverb:

Mango seeds, mango seeds, continuous harvesting with seeds.

Wheat awn seeds go to autumn, bean cold dew hooks with sickle, riding the first frost to collect taro.

Before and after sowing the ears of wheat, men, women and children are busy day and night.

Mango seeds do not grow in high valleys, and they are not ripe after crossing mango seed valleys.

Rice seedlings are covered with sharp valleys, and half of them are inserted in the summer solstice.

In the evening, light a fire (light a lamp) to plant rice seedlings, grab the fire color and get more food.

Mango is the ninth solar term in the twenty-four solar terms of the lunar calendar, and the third solar term in summer indicates the official start of the summer season. When the sun reaches 75 degrees, it is called mango solar term. The literal meaning of awn seed is "the wheat with awn is harvested quickly, and the rice with awn can be planted". "The Moon Order is seventy-two waiting for Ji Jie": "The May Festival means that there are awns in the valley." At this time, the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River in China will enter the rainy Huangmei season.

Proverbs are concise phrases widely circulated among the people, which mostly reflect the practical experience of working people and are generally passed down from mouth to mouth. Most of them are easy-to-understand spoken short sentences or rhymes.