Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - Idiom for hot weather.

Idiom for hot weather.

The black ox spreads the moon, the fire umbrella is high, the scorching gold flows, the flowing gold flows, and the sun burns.

One, five cattle crossing

Vernacular explanation: refers to the hot weather.

Source: "Pass": "Black cattle look at the moon and rest, making them suffer from the sun!"

Dynasty: Han

Author: Shao Ying

Five cows breathe when they look at the moon, which will make him have a hard day!

Second, the height of the umbrella.

Vernacular interpretation: fire umbrella: metaphor of summer sun; Zhang: Expand. Describe the scorching sun in summer, which is very hot.

Source: "You Chengji gave Cui Taibu Que" poem: "Guanghua flashes the wall to see ghosts and gods, hehe Yan Guan Zhang Huoumbrella."

Dynasty: Tang Dynasty

Author: Han Yu

The light of (red leaves) shines on the wall, and the ghosts and gods in the murals of the mountain temple emerge. Its brilliance is as bright as Vulcan's umbrella.

Third, burning gold and stone.

Vernacular explanation: describe the weather as extremely dry and hot.

Source: The Debate of Life: "When the day is right, the flow of gold."

Dynasty: Southern Dynasty

Author: Liu xiaobiao

On the second day of the Twelve Earthly Branches, it was very hot, and metals and stones were melted.

Four. Liu jinshang stone

Vernacular explanation: it can melt stones, which means the weather is extremely hot (from "Chu Ci evokes the soul"). Also said that Shi Shuo Liu Jin.

Source: "Chu Ci Evocation": "After ten days, there are more stones."

Dynasties: Warring States and Chu State

Author: Qu Yuan

Ten suns shine in turn, and all metal stones will melt and deform.

Fifth, the scorching sun.

Vernacular interpretation: Describe the intense sunshine in summer.

Origin: The Water Margin (back to 16) Yang Zhi escorted the Gold and Silver Bear and Wu Yongzhi's birth class: "The scorching sun is like fire, and the wild Tian He rice is half burnt."

Dynasty: Late Yuan Dynasty and Early Ming Dynasty

Author: Shi Naian