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Confluence

[hé liú]
Chinese words
open 4 entries with the same name
Confluence, pronounced h é li ú, refers to the confluence of water flows; Second, it means that the opposite or different ones tend to be consistent in thought and action; Three refers to the integration of different schools of art, academia, etc. [1]
Chinese name
Confluence
Pinyin
hé liú
words whose meaning is similar
trunk stream Main stream, tributary and diversion
Phonetic transcription
ㄏㄜˊ ㄌㄧㄨˊ
Interpretation
The original meaning refers to the confluence of water flows

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One refers to confluence of water flow; Second, it means that the opposite or different ones tend to be consistent in thought and action; Three refers to the integration of different schools of art, academia, etc. [1]
Traffic engineering terminology. The traffic phenomenon of two traffic streams merging into one.

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In the Book of Yu Gong, "Yi River, Luo River, Chan River and Stream flow into the river", Confucius said: "Four rivers flow into the river together."
"Records of the Three Kingdoms · Records of Shu · Biography of Qin Mi": "Therefore, the sea is great for confluence, and the gentleman is great for erudition."
Tang · Lv Mu's poem "Jing Wei Yang Qing Turbidity": "Joining the stream to know Yu's strength, together to Cang Ying."
The first chapter of Kang Zhuo's Water Drips through the Stone: "The large and small springs on the west mountain flow together to the east, and together with the small streams and water from the south and north mountain ridges, they become a river called Luanquan River."
Mao Zedong《 On protracted war ·Three Stages of a Long War: "The enemy will wantonly sabotage the Chinese united front, and all the traitor organizations in the enemy occupied territories will merge to form the so-called 'unified government'."
The first scene of Tian Han's "A Line of Beauty": "Our war of resistance has merged with the world's anti fascist war."
Zhang Binglin's poem discrimination: "From Wei Meng's" In Zou "to" Nineteen Ancient Poems "below, I don't know whether it is the evil of poetry? Will it be the same as Fu?"
Chapter 13 of Tang Yongtong's History of Buddhism in the Han, Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties: "Since the Wei and Jin Dynasties, though the two schools of Buddhism and Buddhism have converged, the boundary of Huarong is not strict."
Lu Xun's "Southern Tunes and Northern Tunes Collection - Preface": "Although this theory is ancient, it is in line with the popular British and American novel theory." [1]