Well, actually it is. The author drew inspiration from a true incident and crafted the book around it. There are many elements that closely resemble real-life circumstances.
Yes, it does. The story in the book is based on real events.
Yes. The book was written with a true story as its foundation. The characters and plot are influenced by real events, making it quite authentic.
This sentence originated from the poem "Climbing the Stork Tower" by the Tang Dynasty poet Wang Zhihuan."There is a line in the book, and there is a golden house in the book." It meant that books contained knowledge and wealth that could allow people to have beautiful wives and spacious houses. This sentence was later widely quoted as a famous saying to express the importance of knowledge and wealth.
There are specializations from the Tang Dynasty literati Han Yu's "teacher said."
I'm not sure. Maybe it's from a little-known indie publication.
Hard to say for sure. Maybe it originated from a news story, or it could be a fictionalized account of a combination of real incidents. The source could be quite diverse.
Hamlet is a famous tragedy in the British literary classic,"The Comedy of William shakespeare." It was written by William shakespeare and first published in 1599. This comedy collection included many famous works such as Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, and so on. It was regarded as one of the representative works of shakespeare and also a classic in the history of world literature.
I think it might come from some historical or cultural books specifically focused on indigenous peoples of the Caribbean region. But I'm not sure exactly which one.
Sure, 'The Watcher' is based on true happenings. Where it comes from exactly is a combination of different real-life stories that the creators have woven together to form this captivating show.
In addition to the three evils from the "Jin Shu·Zhou Chu Zhuan" and "Shi Shuo Xin Yu."
The Ugly Duckling was a fairy tale written by Hans Christian Andersen about a duck turning into a swan. It was regarded as one of the classic fairy tales. This story first appeared in the episode "Ugly Duckling" and was adapted into various forms of literature, including novels, comics, movies, etc.