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What does moko mean?
1, Mo Ke, pronounced as mò kè, a Chinese word, refers to elegant literati such as poets and writers, and also refers to people with culture.

2. In ancient times, Li Bai, Du Fu, Su Shi and Fan Zhongyan were all poets. From Yang Xiong's "Yang Changfu": "The words are not dead, the ink guest falls, and then kowtows." According to "Preface to Changyang Fu", "Chat is written with pen and ink, and the native land is mainly Hanlin, and Mozi takes the wind as a guest." In Fu's place, Hakka dialect was called "Mohist", and later it was another name for literati.

3, "literati" generally refers to literati, literati, the ancients used to describe scholars, people with literary talent. Said by: Han Qing's Biography of Flowers on the Sea: "The literati and poets trained by the old feudal culture put aside state affairs, ate flowers and drank wine all day and wrote colorful poems." These so-called literate people, who were educated in the old society, either don't ask about their death, or indulge in drinking all day and write poems.