
A Tough Woman from a Peasant Family is Ordered to Divorce Her Husband
About This Novel
In his last life, Xia Liangchen experienced unbearable pain. When she opened her eyes again, she turned out to be Lin Daya, a little peasant girl from Laorong Village who was a "natural killer"! Just be a coffin. After all, men are all big hooves, so she doesn't care about him! Getting rich from farming is a piece of cake. She has a double major in agriculture, forestry and chemistry! But why did that scumbag who abandoned his wife and children suddenly transform into the Nine-Five Supreme Being? This is simply unreasonable!
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Official(2)Scraped 9d ago
Too busy
No offense intended, but author, are the villagers here too idle? It should be noted that the corvee service in ancient times was very heavy. A Ding male (a Ding who is over 16 years old) had to perform various kinds of corvée service for at least one to two months and as many as six to seven months a year. Ordinary farmers had to farm and pay taxes, so how could they have free time and energy to do business! Not to mention military service! Even in the prosperous times of the Tang Dynasty, many people still maimed themselves to avoid corvee military service. The government even had punishment laws for this situation. It shows how busy the lives of ordinary people in ancient times were...
Is it actually a sofa?
I'm just a little curious. If Lin Dalang is gone now, does the author plan to have the heroine observe mourning for three years? Or do you want to get married within a hundred days of filial piety? Also, some of the heroine's behaviors don't look like someone who has studied Chinese medicine. People who believe in traditional Chinese medicine will never use a pressure cooker to stew.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(2)Scraped 9d ago
Too busy
No offense intended, but author, are the villagers here too idle? It should be noted that the corvee service in ancient times was very heavy. A Ding male (a Ding who is over 16 years old) had to perform various kinds of corvée service for at least one to two months and as many as six to seven months a year. Ordinary farmers had to farm and pay taxes, so how could they have free time and energy to do business! Not to mention military service! Even in the prosperous times of the Tang Dynasty, many people still maimed themselves to avoid corvee military service. The government even had punishment laws for this situation. It shows how busy the lives of ordinary people in ancient times were...
Is it actually a sofa?
I'm just a little curious. If Lin Dalang is gone now, does the author plan to have the heroine observe mourning for three years? Or do you want to get married within a hundred days of filial piety? Also, some of the heroine's behaviors don't look like someone who has studied Chinese medicine. People who believe in traditional Chinese medicine will never use a pressure cooker to stew.









