The meaning of good luck.
Meet: encounter; Fierce: unfortunate; G: good luck, good luck. In case of danger, it will turn into good luck. This is a superstitious statement. The origin of the idiom: Shi Ming Nai 'an's "Water Margin" forty-second time: "Heroes make friends all over the world, and disaster comes from their mouths." Example of Idiom: Today, I prayed to God to make me lucky in prison and settle down early when I got sick. Note: ㄥˊㄒㄩㄥㄏㄨㄚㄐㄧˊㄧㄑㄑㄑㄑㄑㄑ It can also be turned into good luck in the event of disaster. Chapter 8 and Chapter 4 of "Mirror Flower Edge": "I wish him all the best, and he will succeed when he encounters difficulties." The fourth and second chapters of A Dream of Red Mansions: "In the future, the antonym of good luck will increase: it never rains but it pours, which means that unfortunate things often follow. Now it is often used with blessings, and there is no double happiness. This is a blessing without double happiness. Disaster never comes alone. It is a metaphor that unexpected disasters suddenly fall from the sky and disasters come to the world. " The Water Margin is even worse, and the damage is more serious. Idiom grammar: dual language, as predicate, object and attribute; Refers to the common degree of adversity turning into auspiciousness: common idiom feeling. Color: neutral idiom idiom structure: serial idiom generation year: ancient idiom English translation: turn bad luck into good luck Russian translation: злоключнияо. Note: Ji, you can't write "Yi".