But he was too ambitious and used to be in Weibin.
How grateful is Deng Sheng? He came all the way for help.
Bai Dengxing rebelled and Hong Men was attached to Liu Hou.
Zhong Er was appointed as the Five Sages, and Xiaobai was a hook.
If you can be a second uncle, ask the party and talk?
In the middle of the night, I sighed on my pillow and wanted to swim with my children.
I am a long-lost husband. Why don't I dream about Zhou?
Who's worried about know life because it's a holy day?
Xu Anni is sad for Lin, and Sisi is weeping.
Before the work is built, the setting sun suddenly flows west.
Time is not with me, if you go, it will be like Yunfu.
It's windy in Zhu Shi, and Britain is falling in autumn.
Narrow roads will overturn the canopy, and terrible roads will destroy both.
Why make it into steel and turn it into a soft finger!
Simply put, "fingers are soft" in turn means "flexible enough to wrap your fingers".
However, there are too many things that are "elastic and can be wrapped around your fingers". Such a description seems to belong to meaningless nonsense.
In fact, "flesh of flesh" is not a Chinese noun. There is a saying in Liu Kun's poem "Lu Chen Again" in the Western Jin Dynasty, "What does steel mean? Turn it into a soft finger", which has been quoted many times since then. The problem is that the verb "turn to the finger" and "hundred steelmaking" are linked together, which brings out a knowledge problem of steelmaking.
"Why do you make steel and turn it into soft fingers?" The steelmaking technology in the Western Han Dynasty made new progress on the basis of massive ironmaking in the Warring States period. Repeated hot forging blocks to make iron, or using pig iron to fry cooked iron, and then repeatedly carburizing and forging into steel (so-called "fried steel"), is called "hundred steelmaking". A sword made of this kind of steel with evenly distributed carbon molecules and flexible texture is of course a high-quality weapon. According to Li's Famous Sword, "a sword in Xinghua Lake in Yangzhou bends from beginning to end". As can be seen from the unearthed objects, the steel used for saber and staggered gold book knife unearthed from Liu Sheng Tomb in Mancheng, Hebei Province was originally a piece of carburized steel, and its central part was low carbon steel (carbon content was about 0. 1% ~ 0.2%), which had the advantages of good toughness and not easy to break, while its surface was a hard high carbon layer (carbon content was about 0.6% ~ 0.8%). Liu Shengjian's Vickers hardness can reach 900 ~ 1 170 kg/mm2 at the edge, but only 220 ~ 300 kg/mm2 inside. This shows that its surface has been carburized by hot forging for many times and then quenched to obtain such good properties. A steel sword unearthed in Tongshan, Xuzhou, Jiangsu Province, which was built in the second year of the Eastern Han Dynasty (AD 77), has a total length of 109 cm, and its handle is marked with "fifty stems", which provides us with another example of obtaining a sharp blade by repeated hot forging of fried steel.
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The rise of pouring steel (that is, "group steel") technology in the Southern and Northern Dynasties was naturally used to cast swords. ..... This process of casting raw materials and wrought iron in proportion has been further developed and popularized after the Tang, Song and Yuan Dynasties, but the "hundred steelmaking" which is time-consuming and labor-intensive and has low production efficiency no longer exists. On the basis of forging technology, the quality of the sword made has leapt to a new stage, such as the "flat steel sword" in the Song Dynasty, which is not only hard and sharp, but also elastic. If "bent like a hook, straight like a string." Hide the sword, a kind of slanderers, can also "bend in the box, straight in the vertical" (Shen Kuo's Mengxi). This property is the result of repeated forging to remove impurities and make the structure compact.
The sword made by Baigang has good toughness and elasticity, so it "transforms"-obtains-the function of winding fingers. Of course, the "hundred attempts" here is only a rough figure, which means repeated forgery, more or less times, and it is not true.
Taking "twisting fingers" as the name of literary works, as another name for rings, or something else ... should be regarded as an extension of the meaning of repetition, exercise and brewing (including love), or even an achievement and a result. As for the specific place-the real meaning, it is hard to say.