What do you mean, cattle and horses are behind?

Cattle and horses are behind.

Metaphor does not match the world.

What does crazy horse mean?

Yes: it doesn't matter.

Metaphor has nothing to do with things.

Nature: China Idiom

Source: "Zuo Zhuan Xi Gong Four Years"

According to "Zuo Zhuan Xi Gong Four Years", "In the spring of four years, Qi Hou invaded Cai as a vassal, and Cai was defeated, so he cut Chu. The angel of Zi Chu said to his teacher, "You are in the North Sea and I am in the South China Sea." . It's just irrelevant. I'm not worried about your meddling in our land. "Why?" It turned out that in the spring of four years, the vassal state soldiers attacked Cai. After Cai's defeat, he attacked Chu again. King Chu Cheng sent Qu Wan as an ambassador to the Qi army, saying that you live in the far north, and our Chu State is in the far south, far away. Even if cattle and horses try to chase each other, they can't run into each other's territory. I didn't expect you to join us. "Wind" is used as a verb here, which means "let yourself drift and lose your way". When it comes to the attraction of male and female animals, it is called "wind", because horses and cows are different and will not attract each other. Here is to describe that Qi and Chu are far apart, and cattle and horses will not get lost in each other's territory. Similarly, there is another explanation, "China's View on Ancient Literature": cows go with the wind and horses go against the wind, which means that Qi and Chu have nothing to do with it. Later generations used metaphors such as "wind irrelevant, wind irrelevant, wind irrelevant, wind irrelevant, wind irrelevant".

Reference answer: Baidu Encyclopedia. Satisfied, please adopt it as the best answer. What do you mean?