1. What is the allusion to the word Mengchangjun in ancient poetry?
A nobleman of the Qi State during the Warring States Period.
According to "Historical Records? Biography of Mengchangjun", Mengchangjun's surname was Tian and his given name was Wen. He inherited the title of his father, Jingguojun Tianying, and was established as Duke Xue. He is famous for being good at attracting guests from all over the world. It is said that he has thousands of diners at his door.
Qianzhuang once sent him to Qin and was detained by the king of Qin. Finally, he escaped back to Qi and became prime minister with the help of his followers. Later, because he was jealous of King Hua, he fled and became the prime minister of Wei, and joined forces with Qin, Zhao and Yan to attack Qi.
King Min died and Wan returned to his country. Tian Wen was one of the four great princes during the Warring States Period. After his death, he was posthumously named Lord Mengchang.
Later poems and articles often use "Mengchang Jun" or "Mengchang" to refer to people who are in high positions and are good at courtesy. Liu Changqing of the Tang Dynasty wrote "Qin Xiqing was slandered for his family affairs because he went out to Jiushan to observe Cui Gong and saw that he wanted to return home but failed to realize that he wanted to return. He felt that he lived in exile and gave him a poem as a gift": "I was fascinated by Wuling Road for the first time and came back to Mengchangmen."
Li Bai of the Tang Dynasty "sent Chen Lang off to Hengyang with the princes; the diners in front of the door were floating in the clouds, and everyone in the world was better than Mengchang Jun." "In the Tang Dynasty, Zhang Hu traveled to the Yangtze River and stopped at Cheng Du Yuanwai": "The savages may not be Mao Sui, and the prefect must still be Mengchang." "
Yuan Yelu Chucai's "Twenty Poems about the Western Regions and Wang Jun": "I did not follow Tao Lingqing when I returned, and my close friend did not meet Meng Changxian." 2. Feng Chen's guest Meng Changjun often tests sentences
< p> ① Mengchangjunguizhi: The verb means "guest", and the verb means "guest". The verb "guo" means "guest". Feeling strange about the usage of ? ③ Mr. is not ashamed: The usage of shame means shame. The usage of ? means shame. ④ Mr. Mengchang blames him. Disease: Weird meaning usage, feeling strange. Form-meaning usage, feeling strange about ? For the son. The meaning of the action is for the son.2. The use of the verb:
So the king of Liang came to the throne: vacated.
3. Name → See it with clothes: wear it well. ① Clothes ② So Jia Lizhi: Use the way of merchants to get it. Jia
4. Noun → Status: ① Journey to the West. ② Seek in the morning.
(3) Ancient and modern meanings:
1. Juguo Yu Xue: "Guo" ancient meaning: Feng Yi. Modern meaning: country. Feng Yi. Country. Feng Yi country. 2. Yingjun Road Zhongdaozhong: Daozhong ancient meaning: Halfway. On the way. On the way. On the way.
(4) The word has multiple meanings:
1. Farewell: "After all the responsibilities are over, where can I go?" "But instead": Say goodbye. Say goodbye to Lord Mengchang and refuse to go: say no. Say no. Say no. 2. Gu: Gu Xianwang's ancestral temple: Gu Nian, for the sake of?. Gu Nian, for the sake of For Gu Nian's sake, Meng Changjun Gu said to Feng Xuan: Look back. Look back. 2. Function words: Function words:
Verb;
1. To: left and right: verb; to think, to think. To eat with grass utensils: preposition, to use, to tell: preposition, to preposition no. Weijia: preposition, used for. Preposition
2. Nai is the righteousness of the king and the city. It is the righteousness of the king and the city today. See: adverb, only. Adverb is an adverb
3. Qi Qiwen: an adverb that expresses a speculative mood, an adverb that expresses a speculative mood, an adverb that expresses a speculative mood. Probably, probably. Because of burning its coupons: far-referring pronouns, that. Distal referent pronouns, its Distal referent pronouns Mengchangjun blamed his illness: third person pronoun, he. Third person pronouns, its third person pronouns Qi put his minister Mengchang Jun among the princes: pronouns, his own. Pronoun, its pronoun own. 3. Idioms related to Mengchangjun
The idioms related to Mengchangjun are
Chickens crow and dogs robbers
Pinyin:
[jī míng gǒu dào]
Basic meaning
Ming: to bark; to steal: to steal something. Refers to trivial skills. Also refers to sneaky behavior.
Source
"Historical Records·Biography of Mengchangjun" records that during the Warring States Period, Tian Wen, Lord Mengchang of Qi State, was detained in Qin State; one of his retainers pretended to be a dog and entered the Qin Palace at night; he stole out. The fox fur that had been presented to the King of Qin was given to a concubine of the King of Qin, and Lord Mengchang was released. He also relied on a retainer to pretend to be a cockcrow and deceived him into opening the city gate of Hangu Pass before escaping back to Qi.
"Book of Han·Youxia Biography": "Yao (you) is the prince of various countries; Wei has Xinling; Zhao has Pingyuan; Qi has Mengchang; Chu has Chunjia; they all use the power of the princes to compete as a ranger; cocks crow and dogs rob; they all complement each other. "Wang Anshi of the Song Dynasty, "Wang Wengong's Collected Works, Volume 33, Reading the Biography of Mengchangjun": "Mengchangjun's cock crows like a dog's robber's ear!" 4. Recommended idioms for Mengchangjun
Idioms about Mengchangjun's disciples: cock crowing, dog stealing Pinyin: jī míng gǒu dào Explanation: crowing: barking; robber: stealing something. Refers to trivial skills. Also refers to sneaky behavior. Source: "Historical Records·Biography of Lord Mengchang" records: Lord Mengchang of Qi was detained by King Zhao when he was on an envoy to Qin. Meng Yi, a diner pretending to be a dog, sneaked into the Qin camp and stole the fox white
Lord Mengchang\Idioms
Lord Mengchang Idiom for the diners: cock crowing, dog robber Pinyin: jī míng gǒu dào Explanation: crowing: to bark; robber: to steal something. Refers to trivial skills. Also refers to sneaky behavior.
Source: "Historical Records·Biography of Lord Mengchang" records: Lord Mengchang of Qi was detained by King Zhao when he was on an envoy to Qin. Meng Yi, a diner pretending to be a dog, sneaked into the Qin camp and stole the fox white