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Toilet: A bucket with a lid for urinating and urinating, commonly known as a horse. The history of the toilet can be traced back to the Han Dynasty, when the toilet was called Huzi, which was dedicated to the emperor, and legend has it that it was made of jade.
It was held by eunuchs who served the emperor at any time. Later, in the Tang Dynasty, because there was a person named Li Hu in the emperor's family, in order to avoid secrecy, he changed the name of Huzi to Beast or Mazi. After that, in the circulation, it evolved into the name of the toilet.
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Legend has it that during the Western Han Dynasty, Li Guang shot the sleeping tiger through Yang arrows, and specially ordered people to cast a copper drowning device in the shape of a tiger for Xiao Xie to use, which means contempt for the tiger, and later generations called it "Huzi". Later, it was changed to a toilet because of avoidance.
Liverpool's badge is more like a toilet, not the current flush toilet, but the kind of toilet that used to be emptied at night and during the day. >>>More
This can be traced back to the "Wooden Horse" in Ouyang Xiu's "Returning to the Field Lu II" in the Northern Song Dynasty, which is the earliest written record of the toilet. As for the history of the toilet, this has to start from the Han Dynasty, "Xijing Miscellaneous Records" said that the Han Dynasty court made "tigers" out of jade, which were held by the emperor's attendants in case the emperor was convenient at any time. This kind of "tiger" is a special appliance called a toilet and a potty by later generations, and it is also the predecessor of the toilet. >>>More
Legend has it that during the Western Han Dynasty, Li Guang shot the sleeping tiger through Yang arrows, and specially ordered people to cast a copper drowning device in the shape of a tiger for Xiao Xie to use, which means contempt for the tiger, and later generations called it "Huzi". Later, it was changed to a toilet because of avoidance.
Look at the shape of the box on the outside of the Liverpool crest.
Because in the palace, it is not directly said to go to the toilet, and going to the toilet is called - out of Gong, so naturally the toilet is called Gong Bucket.