Composition: The cloak is full of stars, and Dai Yue's shawl is invincible.
deal with
A cloak is a kind of clothes, a kind of coat to wear. Most of them are straight-draped, tied around the neck, with long sleeves and slits under the armpits (the cloak described in the third volume of Zhu Shunshui Tan Qi in Qing Dynasty is straight-draped, with slits on the left and right).
Cloak was very popular in Ming dynasty. Generally, it can be worn outdoors or indoors.
Go to work before dawn and go home when the moon comes out-work before dawn until dark.
China idioms. Put the stars and the moon on your head. It's hard to describe running around all night or going out early and coming back late.
Source: Yuan's "Enemy and Creditor" Article 1: "This big child wears a star Dai Yue and gets up early and goes to bed late."
muffler
Shawls, also called cloud shoulders, are mostly made of satin and brocade. Most cloud shoulders are composed of four kinds of moire patterns, which are called four-in-one wishful pattern, willow pattern and lotus pattern. There are auspicious propositions such as rich peony, long life, and more than one year. It was very popular in Ming and Qing dynasties, and it was mostly used in social occasions such as weddings and receptions.
Source:? Don? Du Xunhe's poem "Idle Two Gentlemen Pass on the Zen Method to Know Each other": "The rosary is in hand, and the Zen shawl misses the bead."
invincible
Wherever power goes, all obstacles are swept away. This phrase is usually used to describe the winning team that has no opponent in military or sports competitions.
Source: Biography of Xiao Zhen: "The battle of Zhongshan was really fierce and invincible, and the group was afraid."
Historical Records of Xiang Yu: "So Wang Xiangyi shouted that the Han army was invincible."
Go ahead/break through the thorns
Put it on: put it aside; Chop: cut off; Thorn: A small shrub with many thorns. Removing thorns and cutting thorns is a metaphor for removing obstacles and overcoming difficulties on the way forward.
Source: Biography of Feng Yi in the Later Han Dynasty by Ye Fan in the Southern Dynasties: "The emperor said, the official said,' When I set out, I was my main book, and I was placed in Guanzhong. "