1. Are there any famous sayings in ancient texts that express how to unite everyone’s strength to accomplish great things?
Brothers working together can be as powerful as metal. (Generally refers to a small number of people)
When people unite, Mount Tai can move. (This means that there are many people)
If a large number of people work together, then the battle can be won and the defense can be strong. ("Guan Zi·Chong Ling" is also very insightful, I wonder if the audience can understand it)
Ten thousand people are united in one mind, how can they not be defeated? How can it be defeated? (Ming Dynasty Guo Wei's "The Golden Pill of One Hundred Sons" is a little easier to understand)
Also refer to less ancient texts
When everyone adds firewood, the flames rise. . (Popular version)
When everyone is united, loess turns into gold. (It’s not appropriate to turn everything into gold. You have to grow vegetable puree)
The army and the people are united as one, let’s see who can defeat them in the world. (Want to engage in class struggle? Now we use some slogans)
With unity and one heart and one mind, any powerful enemy and any difficult environment will surrender to us. (Chairman Mao always wants others to surrender) 2. What are the ancient Chinese sayings that describe "don't be anxious"?
Without haste, there will be no small gain;
1. From "The Analects of Confucius·Zilu".
Original text: Zixia was the governor of Ju Fu and asked about government affairs. Confucius said: "If there is no desire for haste, there will be no small gains. If you have haste, you will not achieve anything. If you see small gains, you will not achieve great things."
Translation Zixia became the steward of Ju Fu and asked Confucius how to handle political affairs. Confucius said: "Don't ask for speed, and don't be greedy for small profits. If you ask for speed, you will not achieve your goal, and if you are greedy for small profits, you will not achieve great things."
2. Words to describe "don't be anxious"
Step by step [xún xù jiàn jìn]
1. [Definition] Refers to the gradual deepening or improvement of learning and work according to certain steps. Xun: follow; order: order; gradually: gradually.
[Quote] "The Analects of Confucius·Xianwen": "Don't complain about heaven; don't blame others; learn from the bottom and reach the top." Zhu Xi's note: "...This is just self-reflection and self-cultivation; step by step "Ear."
2. [Distinguish form] Advance; cannot write "end"; gradually; cannot write "see".
3. [Synonym] step by step from the shallower to the deeper
4. [Antonym] reach the sky in one step
3. Words that describe being very anxious
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1. At a loss: to put it down. I don’t know where to put my hands and feet. Describes acting in a panic, or being unable to cope.
2. Up and down: Describes feeling flustered and uneasy.
3. Sitting on pins and needles: like sitting on a felt with needles stuck in it. Describes being restless and restless.
4. Can’t wait: urgent: urgent. Too urgent to wait. Describes an anxious mood.
5. Restlessness: unable to sleep well and unable to eat. Very worried.
6. With many hands and eight feet: describes people with many hands and chaotic movements.
7. Confused: My heart is in a mess. Describes being very upset.
8. Sitting on pins and needles: like sitting on a felt with needles stuck in it. Describes being restless and restless.
9. In a hurry: to describe being in a hurry.
10. Hurry: Describes a flustered and unsteady behavior. 3. What are some classical Chinese sentences about caring about small things?
1. How can you sweep the world without sweeping a house? ——Fan Ye, historian of the Southern Song Dynasty
2. A person can only solve one limited goal at a time. ——Beveridge
3. Those who cannot do small things cannot do big things. ——Lomonosov
4. Great achievements are made from bits and pieces. —— Bacon
5. There is no trivial matter in work: stones turn into gold, drops of water turn into rivers. Only by taking everything you do seriously can you overcome all difficulties and achieve success. ——Anonymous
6. The smallest is the best, the smallest is the best. ——Zizhi Tongjian
7. Huge buildings are always made of wood and stone. Why don’t we make this wood and stone? I do little bits and pieces from time to time, just for this.
——Lu Xun
8. It is better to do small things than to do nothing. ——Russia
9. Great things in the world must be done in detail. ——Lao Tzu
10. When it comes to major issues in the world, you should focus on the big picture and start small. ——Zeng Guofan of the Qing Dynasty
11. Don’t do good deeds because they are small, and don’t do evil because they are small. ——Liu Bei teaches his son
12. If you don’t accumulate small steps, you can’t reach a thousand miles; if you don’t accumulate small streams, you can’t become a river. ——Xunzi's "Encouraging Learning" 4. What are the classical Chinese texts that describe "working seriously"?
Classical Chinese texts that describe working seriously:
"Ti Di Di Nephew's Bookstore"
< p> What's the point of living in poverty? There is no end to the road. When there is chaos, it is still the same as when it is quiet.Although his family is in the land of war, my brother and nephew often practice rituals and music.
The shadow of bamboo on the window shakes on the desk, and the sound of wild spring flows into the inkstone pond.
Young people work hard all their lives, and don’t waste time and effort.
"Xunzi - Encouraging Learning": Earthworms have no sharp claws and teeth, and no strong bones and muscles.
Kuang Heng studied diligently and held a candle, but his neighbor did not catch a candle. Heng passed the wall through the wall to draw its light, and then read a book under the light. The people in the town were illiterate and their family was rich and well-educated. Heng worked as a servant without asking for compensation. The master asked Heng strangely, and Heng said: "I would like to get the master's book and read it over and over. The master sighed and gave him the book, and then he became a university.
Classical Chinese essays about hard work
So When Heaven is about to entrust a person with a great responsibility, he must first strain his mind, strain his muscles and bones, starve his body and skin, deplete his body, and mess up his actions, so tempting his mind and forbearance will benefit him beyond what he can do.
< p>Pu Songling'sThose who have a will, things can come true, even if the cauldron sinks the boat, a hundred and two Qin Pass will eventually belong to Chu.
Those who work hard will not be disappointed by God. Destroy Wu.
Those who achieved great things in ancient times must not only have extraordinary talents, but also must have perseverance. Su Shi
If you don’t repeat your prime, you will never be able to do it again. In the morning, it is advisable to encourage oneself in time, as time waits for no one. Tao Yuanming
Therefore, when Heaven is about to entrust a person with a great responsibility, he must first prepare his mind and will, work his muscles and bones, starve his body, and deplete his body. What he did was messy, so he was tempted and endured, and he was able to benefit what he couldn't do.
A horse can't take ten steps with one leap; a horse can ride ten steps, but the merit lies in perseverance; if you persevere, the rotten wood will not break; If you persevere, gold and stone can be carved. .
Source from Pre-Qin Dynasty Han Fei's "Han Feizi·Five Beetles": "People in the Song Dynasty were plowing fields. There was a rabbit in the field. It touched a pillar and broke its neck and died. "Usage: Linked form; used as object, attributive; with derogatory meaning. Example: Ming Dynasty Feng Menglong's "Ancient and Modern Novels: Yang Balao's Strange Encounter in Yue Kingdom": "I heard that the family management is based on diligence and frugality, ~, is this a good plan? "The synonyms of carving a boat and seeking a sword, the antonym of sticking to the rules, the understanding of contingency, the lantern riddle, the willow allusion. A farmer in the Song Dynasty was digging the soil in the field.
Suddenly, he saw a hare rushing out of the grass next to him, and bumped into it. It lay motionless on the tree stump at the edge of the field. The farmer walked over and saw that the rabbit was dead.
It was running too fast and broke its neck. The farmer was so happy that he picked up a fat and big hare without any effort.
He thought to himself: If he could pick up a hare every day, his life would be better. From then on, he no longer worked hard to farm.
Every day, he put the hoe next to him and lay in front of the tree pillar, waiting for the second or third hare to hit it. The tree stump comes up. There are so many cheap things in the world.
Of course, the farmer did not pick up the killed hare, but his field was deserted. [Hint] This is a popular fable. < /p>
Trying to live by luck without relying on your own hard work will not yield good results. We must not be fools who "just wait and wait."
[ Original text] People in the Song Dynasty had farmers.
There was a plant ① in the field. A rabbit walked along and touched the plant ②. It broke its neck and died.
To release the weeds and keep the plant ③, hoping to get the rabbit ④ again. The rabbit cannot be recovered, but it is the song of Song Dynasty.
——"Han Feizi" [Annotation] ①tree——the roots and stems of trees exposed on the ground. ②Walk - run, escape.
③Lei (lěi) - an ancient agricultural tool shaped like a wooden fork. ④ Wing - hope.
⑤As a person of the Song Dynasty, he was laughed at - but he himself was laughed at by the people of the Song Dynasty. yǎn ěr dào líng (yǎn ěr dào líng) explanation: to cover; to steal: to steal.
Cover your ears and steal the bell. Metaphor to deceive yourself.
Source from Lu Buwei's "Lu Shi Chun Qiu Zi Zhi" in the Warring States Period: "People who have a bell want to carry it and walk away, but the bell is too big to bear. If you destroy it with the vertebrae, the bell will still have a sound.
Afraid that someone might hear it and take it away from you, so you cover your ears. "Used in linked form; used as predicate, attributive, and adverbial; with derogatory meaning. Example: Act 4 of Hong Shen's "The Young Mistress's Fan": "I think I can keep my own. Aloof, isn't it~? "Synonyms: self-deception, self-defeating, antonyms: frankness, riddles and allusions. Once upon a time, there was a person who was stupid and selfish, and he also had a bad habit of taking advantage.
Whatever he likes, he always tries his best to get it, even steal it. Once, it took a fancy to the bell hanging on the door of a house.
The door bell is very exquisitely made, beautiful and has a loud sound. He thought, how can he get it? Finally decided to steal it.
He knew very well that as long as he touched the bell with his hand, it would sound "ding zero, ting zero, ding zero". When the doorbell rings, your ears will hear the sound of the bell. If you hear the sound, you will be discovered.
Then you won’t get the bell. What to do? Suddenly he came up with an idea.
He believed that when the doorbell rang, his ears would be able to hear it. If he covered his ears, wouldn’t he be unable to hear it? So he cleverly adopted this method to steal the doorbell. One night, he took advantage of the moonlight and tiptoed to the front door of the house.
He stretched out his hand to pick the bell, but the doorbell was hung too high and could not be reached, so he had to come back disappointed. When he got home, what did he want to do? He wanted to ask the deaf neighbor to steal the bell together, and he could pick the bell by stepping on his shoulder.
But I am afraid that others will not do it and steal things with him, so I have to step on the stool and pick the bells by myself. The next night, he took the stool and tiptoed to the door of the house.
He stepped on the stool, covering his ears with one hand, and picking the bell with the other. Unexpectedly, as soon as he touched the bell, the bell rang. When the owner of the house noticed it, he caught him.
Because other people’s ears are not covered, they can still hear the sound of the bell. Source: "Lu's Spring and Autumn Period·Zi Zhi": "People who have a bell want to carry it and walk away, but the bell cannot be carried.
Destroy it with the vertebrae, but the bell still has a sound. I am afraid that people will hear it and take it away. "Ji Ye, cover his ears quickly"
Explanation: cover: cover, cover; steal: steal. Steal the bell and cover your ears for fear of being heard.
It is a metaphor for deceiving oneself, trying to cover up things that obviously cannot be covered up. [Tip] The sound of bells exists objectively and does not disappear just because you block your ears; everything in the world also exists objectively and does not cease to exist or change shape just because you close your eyes.
Although this fable is short, it vividly and vividly illustrates a basic principle of dialectical materialism: not facing up to or studying the objective reality, and adopting an attitude of closing one's eyes and listening. You are deceiving yourself and others, and you will suffer the consequences in the end. [Original text] With the death of the Fan family ①, there are people who are worthy of the bell ②.
If you want to carry it and walk away ③, the bell will be too big to bear; if you destroy the vertebrae ④, the bell will still have a sound ⑤. He was afraid that the world would snatch him away, so he suddenly covered his ears ⑥.
——"Lu's Spring and Autumn Annals" [Annotation] ① The death of the Fan family - The Fan family was a nobleman of the Pu Kingdom at the end of the Spring and Autumn Period. After being defeated by the alliance of four other noble families, he fled to the Qi Kingdom. To flee, to flee.
② Bell - an ancient percussion instrument. ③ Negative - carry something on your back.
④ vertebral column (chuí) - hammer. ⑤ Condition (huàng) Ran - describes the sound of bells.
⑥饽(jǜ)——rapidly. Steal the bell and cover your ears for fear of being heard.
It is a metaphor for deceiving oneself, trying to cover up things that obviously cannot be covered up. The pronunciation of nán yuán běi zhé is: I want to go south but the car goes north instead.
Metaphorical action and purpose are exactly opposite. Source: "Warring States Policies·Wei Ce IV": "You still have to go north to Chu."
Original text: The king of Wei wanted to attack Handan, Ji Liang admonished him: "Now that I have come, I will see the people in Daxing, facing north, held his chariot and told his ministers, "I want Chu." The minister said, "Your Majesty, Chu, will Xi face the north?" He said, "My horse is good." :'Although the horse is good, this is not the way of Chu.' He said: 'I use it a lot.' The minister said: 'Use it.