1, Hao Han (hào hàn), originally meant the magnificent appearance of water, and extended to the meaning of vastness and diversity. The word originated from the ancient prose Huai Nan Zi and Wen Xin Diao Long, both of which described the huge water potential. Nowadays, it is widely used to describe the profoundness of knowledge and art. Zhou Enlai's poem Farewell to Li Yuru, Xiuge: "Go abroad, take the East China Sea, the South China Sea, the Red Sea and the Mediterranean Sea, and the waves are surging everywhere, sending you to the French coast of your free hometown."
2. Gu Hao is a Chinese word, and its pinyin is pāng hào, which means vast. The source is "Songs of the South Zhao Da": "Beautiful and magnificent, beautiful and beautiful." She looks handsome and elegant. Look at her delicate ruddy face.
3. Haoran is a Chinese vocabulary, and the pinyin is hào rán, which basically means grand appearance. Volume 82 from Fayuan Zhu Lin is quoted from Yan's Ghost in the Southern Dynasties: "When it rains and floods, I look forward to it. I don't know where it is shallow, but I can get rid of it." Xu Minghongzu's Travels of Xu Xiake and Diary of Western Guangdong: "South of the cliff, the river flows freely." .
4. ho à o à refers to the grandeur of momentum, scale and quantity. Describe things with great macro momentum, great momentum (momentum, scale, etc. ) grand and huge.
5. Hao Hao's pinyin is hàohào, which means noble and upright. Language "Book Yao Dian": "The soup was cut by the flood, and Hu Aishan Xiangling swayed." The flood raged and split the earth into pieces like a hole. Floods are everywhere, and the waves are sky-high.