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What is Lalang?
Lalang? From the folk "Lang Lang Pei", it is to bring two men and women who have no emotional foundation together to be a couple.

Later, the word was used in various scenes, meaning that fans pulled two unrelated characters together to form CP, which could be a man and a woman or a man and a woman. Characters can come from film and television works, novels, or stars love beans.

source

The word "proverb" first appeared in Sima Qian's Biography of Historical Records and Funny Stories in the Western Han Dynasty in China. Take Chu's article Ximen Bao Ruling Ye as an example: "People say that' if you don't marry Hebo, the water will float far away and drown its people' clouds." The word "proverb" here refers to popular saying.

Later, Liu Xiang quoted the words in Lu Wenshu's letter to Xuan Di, the Emperor Gaozu of Han Dynasty, in Shuo Yuan Guide and Ban Gu's Biography of Han Shu and Lu Wenshu, and formally used "proverbs" to refer to popular, vivid and widely circulated stereotypes:

"So, as the saying goes:' It is impossible to draw the ground as a prison; For official woodcarving, the period can't be right. "This is the wind of illness." ("Guide to Telling the Garden") "So, as the saying goes:' Draw the ground as a prison and take it by surprise; Now is not the time to carve official wood. "This is the wind of illness." ("Lu Han Wen Shu Chuan")