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Pastoral idioms
The animal husbandry idiom is as follows: 1. There is no land in Mu Zhi: land where cattle and horses cannot be grazed refers to wasteland.

2. Washing soldiers and herding horses: scrubbing weapons and feeding horses means preparing for battle.

3, humility and self-grazing: modesty and prudence, self-cultivation.

4. Ten sheep and nine shepherds: ten sheep and nine shepherds mean more officials and fewer people, and tax exploitation is very serious.

5, like a wolf herding sheep: like a wolf raising sheep, it is a metaphor for the cruel oppression of the people by officials.

6. Shepherd of Suwu: Su Wu: Han Dynasty. Su Wuning would rather die than surrender to the Huns.

The word groups of pastoral figures are as follows:

1, Mamu, Qian, Ju, Tian, Shou, Shi, Si, III, Shen, Tong, Tu, Wei, Shu, Tian, Xian, Yue, Zai.

2. Official, Ge, Shao, Fang, Du, Jiao, Heng, Jing, Dian, Dian, De, Chu, Chu, Zen, Ugliness, Nothing, Bo and Bang.