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Sun quan. Allusion In the late Eastern Han Dynasty, Sun Quan wanted to take back Jingzhou, and Zhou Yu offered a plan to "pretend to recruit relatives and take hostages". Zhuge Liang saw through it and arranged for Zhao Yun to accompany him, first visiting Zhou Yu's father-in-law Qiao Xuan, Qiao Xuan said that Wu Guotai would meet in Ganlu Temple, and Wu Guotai would really marry Sun Shangxiang to Liu Bei.
Sun Quan and Zhou Yu were ridiculed as "Zhou Lang's clever plan to settle the world, but he lost his wife and broke his army".
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This allusion comes from Zhou Yu.
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It was Sun Quan who lost his wife and lost his soldiers.
Allusion: During the Three Kingdoms hegemony in the late Eastern Han Dynasty, Sun Quan wanted to take back Jingzhou, and Zhou Yu offered a plan to "pretend to recruit relatives and take hostages". Zhuge Liang saw through it and arranged for Zhao Yun to accompany him, first visiting Zhou Yu's father-in-law Qiao Gong, Qiao Gong said that Wu Guotai would meet in Ganlu Temple, and Wu Guotai would really marry Sun Shangxiang to Liu Bei.
Sun Quan and Zhou Yu were ridiculed as "Zhou Lang's clever plan to settle the world, but he lost his wife and broke his army".
Idiom explanation: I lost my wife and broke my soldiers.
Explanation]: The metaphor wants to take advantage, but suffers a double loss.
From]: Ming Luo Guanzhong's "Romance of the Three Kingdoms" Chapter 55: "Zhou Lang's clever plan to settle the world, he lost his wife and broke his soldiers." ”
Interpretation]: In the Three Kingdoms, Zhou Yu and Sun Quan planned to use Sun Shangxiang as bait to lure Liu Bei into submission, but they didn't expect Liu Bei to be unscathed, and he hugged the beauty, and Zhou Yu's clever plan failed.
Grammar]: complex sentence form; as a predicate, complement; Derogatory.
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Lost his wife and lost his soldiers: The metaphor wanted to take advantage, but suffered a double loss.
From]: Ming Luo Guanzhong's "Romance of the Three Kingdoms" Chapter 55: "Zhou Lang's clever plan to settle the world, he lost his wife and broke his soldiers." ”
refers to Sun Quan and Zhou Yu.
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Zhou Yu, but this is just the story of the Romance of the Three Kingdoms.
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refers to the general Sun Shangxiang, Mrs. Sun, a native of Fuchun, Wujun (now Fuyang, Hangzhou, Zhejiang), the sister of the general Sun Quan in the late Eastern Han Dynasty, and the wife of Liu Bei, the general of Zuo. "Romance of the Three Kingdoms" calls it Mrs. Sun.
In ** "Romance of the Three Kingdoms", Zhou Yu offered a plan to "fake recruiting relatives and taking hostages". Zhuge Liang saw through it and arranged for Zhao Yun to accompany him, first visiting Zhou Yu's father-in-law, Qiao Guolao, Qiao Guolao said that Wu Guotai would meet in Ganlu Temple, and Wu Guotai would really marry Mrs. Sun to Liu Bei. Sun Quan and Zhou Yu were ridiculed as "Zhou Lang's clever plan to settle the world, but he lost his wife and broke his army".
The metaphor wants to take advantage, but suffers a double loss.
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The wife who lost his wife and broke his soldiers was Sun Shangxiang.
Sun Shangxiang, Mrs. Sun, a native of Fuchun, Wu County (now Fuyang, Hangzhou, Zhejiang), was the sister of Sun Quan, a general who was captured in the late Eastern Han Dynasty, and was the wife of Liu Bei, the general of Zuo Xiangfan. "Romance of the Three Kingdoms" calls it Mrs. Sun.
Losing the wife and breaking the army is an idiom in historical stories, which first came out of the Yuan miscellaneous drama "Fighting Wisdom across the River", and Luo Guanzhong's "Romance of the Three Kingdoms" in the Ming Dynasty also recorded the same story.
During the Three Kingdoms, Zhou Yu made a plan to marry Sun Quan's sister Xu to Liu Bei, and let Liu Bei get married in Eastern Wu, wanting to take the opportunity to detain and take Lu Qinghail back to Jingzhou. As a result, Liu Bei escaped from Soochow with his wife after getting married. Zhou Yu led his troops to chase after him, but was defeated by Zhuge Liang's ambush.
People ridiculed Zhou Yu for "losing his wife and breaking his soldiers". Later, he used the metaphor of "losing his wife and breaking his soldiers" to take advantage, but instead of taking advantage, he suffered a loss (fold: loss).
The idiom is mostly used as a predicate in the sentence, and is also used as a definite and complement.
Landlord, this is an allusion.
At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, Sun Quan wanted to take back Jingzhou, and Zhou Yu offered a plan to "fake relatives and take hostages". Zhuge Liang saw through it and arranged for Zhao Yun to accompany him, first visiting Zhou Yu's father-in-law Qiao Xuan, Qiao Xuan said that Wu Guotai would meet in Ganlu Temple, and Wu Guotai would really marry Sun Shangxiang to Liu Bei. Sun Quan and Zhou Yu were ridiculed as "Zhou Lang's clever plan to settle the world, but he lost his wife and broke his army". >>>More
Explanation of the metaphor of wanting to take advantage of it, but suffering a double loss. Source: Ming Luo Guanzhong's "Romance of the Three Kingdoms" Chapter 55: "Zhou Lang's clever plan to settle the world, he lost his wife and lost his soldiers." >>>More
For the sentence, see the end of the fifty-fifth chapter of "Romance of the Three Kingdoms": When Zhou Yu hurriedly got off the boat, the soldiers on the shore shouted in unison: "Zhou Lang's clever plan is to calm the world, and he accompanies his wife and breaks the army!" >>>More
He was less than 20 years old when he married Liu Bei, and Liu Bei was already 49 years old, which means that if they lived for the same long time, she would have to be widowed for 30 years, I don't think any woman wants to, unless it is forced to make a living, but she is obviously not.
Oh, a long history, there are many great people, whether it is Liu Bang or Xiang Yu, they are all great in life, if the brain teaser is in a hurry, I will Liu Hulan Because of the greatness of life and the glory of death...