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What is the latest floral language of the other shore flower?

Published: 2024-11-06 Author: mysheen
Last Updated: 2024/11/06, What is the fancy language of the other shore flower? The other shore flower is native to China, Japan and Korea, and is distributed in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River and parts of southwest China. Historically, the other shore flower was called Golden Lantern, Red Arrow or unrighteous grass in China, and it was first seen in the Tang Dynasty. The floral language of the other shore flower

What is the fancy language of the other shore flower? The other shore flower is native to China, Japan and Korea, and is distributed in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River and parts of southwest China. Historically, the other shore flower was called Golden Lantern, Red Arrow or unrighteous grass in China, and it was first seen in the Tang Dynasty.

The floral language of the other shore flower

Chinese flower language: "beautiful and pure", which means beautiful and moving.

Japanese flower language: "sad memories".

Korean flower language: "miss each other".

The other shore flower is divided into manzhu Shahua (red) and mandala Hua (white), and the flower language is also different in different colors.

Manzhu Shahua: endless love, the precursor of death, the call of hell.

Mandala: endless yearning, desperate love, letters from heaven.

The origin of the flowers on the other side

"Mahama Zhu Shahua" originally means the flower of the sky, the big safflower, one of the auspicious signs of heaven. It is also said in the Buddhist scriptures that Manzhushahua (Manshu Shahua) is a flower blooming in the sky, white and soft. According to the Buddhist language, the teal is the flower in full bloom at the end of the flowering season, leaving only the flowers blooming on the other side of the forgotten previous life. Because it blossoms on the other side of autumn, it is called "other shore flower".

After reading the flower words of the other shore flower, let's take a look at the related legends of the other shore flower.

 
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