The characters next to the character Xin include: Gu,辝,PI,Ci,辠,La,La,衡,褤,bia,bian,Ban,辧,襥,Braid,辪,辬,ici, braid, debate.
The original meaning of "Xin" is the torture knife, or refers to sin. The process of pleading guilty is arduous, so it means "hard work" and "hard work". In addition, in addition to guilt and hardship, spicy food can also make people feel extremely painful, so Xin is also extended to vegetables with pungent flavors such as onions and garlic, as well as spicy food. The two-syllable word "spicy" is From this.
The idiom of the word "Xin"
1. The pinyin of Bei Chang Xīn kǔ is: [bèi cháng xīn kǔ], explanation: Bei: exhaust, complete. Taste: experience. Suffered all kinds of hardships. Source: "Records of Shun Zong" by Han Yu of the Tang Dynasty: "Shang Chang personally held the bow and arrow, led the army and led the guard, preparing for the hardship."
2. The pinyin for "hard work" is: [hán xīn rěn kǔ] , explanation: see "bearing all kinds of hardships". Source: Volume 20 of "Surprise at the Second Moment": "As for the merchants, they are not even suspicious of others, so they have to endure the hardships, regret and complain, and have no choice."
3. The hard-working people Pinyin is: [hán xīn rú kǔ], explanation: pungent: spicy; mushroom: edible. It's bitter and spicy. A metaphor for enduring all kinds of hardships and sufferings. Quotation: Su Shi of the Song Dynasty, "Zhonghe Shengxiangyuan Ji": endure hardships and hardships, and achieve success after hundreds of thousands of billions of births.
4. On the topic of sweet and avoid spicy, the pinyin is: [lùn gān jì xīn], explanation: when it comes to sweet, spicy is taboo. A metaphor for being kind and paranoid. Source: Preface to the poem "Miscellaneous" by Liang Jiangyan of the Southern Dynasty: "As for the sages in the world, they are all obsessed with each other. They don't care about sweets and avoid pungents, and prefer elixirs to plain foods."
5. Wan The pinyin of Ku Qianxin is: [wàn kǔ qiān xīn], meaning: all kinds of hardships. Source: The fourth chapter of "Flying Knives and Arrows" by Anonymous Yuan Dynasty: "I suffered a lot of blood spurts and endured countless hardships, but it was just like escaping from the rolling snow waves."