Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - Huifeng refers to the wind in which season.

Huifeng refers to the wind in which season.

Huifeng refers to the wind for three months.

Huifeng and Chang usually refer to spring, but they are usually used to describe warm and soft winds, so they can also refer to late summer or early autumn. Hui Feng and Chang is an idiom in China, which refers to a warm and comfortable breeze. Hui Feng often comes from Wang Xizhi's Preface to Lanting Collection. The original sentence is: sunny and sunny, sunny and pleasant.

In fact, this sentence means that on this day, the weather is fine and the breeze is blowing gently. The meaning of "Hui Feng He Chang" is to remind yourself to be as kind and amiable as the spring breeze, and to hope that the family will be harmonious and the wife will be virtuous.

Another name and nickname of winter wind

1, Three winters: The ancients took October of the lunar calendar as Meng Dong, November as Midwinter, and December as Ji Dong, which collectively referred to March as "Three winters", generally referring to winter. For example, in the poem "Send Five Poems No.2" written by Du Fu, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, there is a saying that "the dragon will lie in the winter for three days, and the old crane will feel Wan Li's heart".

2. Nine winters: Winter lasts for three months * * * ninety days, so winter is also called "Nine winters". For example, there is a sentence in Shen Yue's poem "Walking at Night and Smelling Night Crane" in the Southern Dynasties: "Frost and snow in nine winters, and six purlins fly away."

3, severe winter: Yan has the meaning of "depth", so "severe winter" has become synonymous with extremely cold winter. For example, Guan Xiu, a monk in the Tang Dynasty, wrote, "The river dries up in severe winter, and prostitutes are severely punished."