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What do you mean, worthless?
What does the idiom money mean?

Wan Xuan and Qian Qing: Metaphor of Excellent Articles.

Daily expenses: it costs tens of thousands of yuan to eat and drink every day. Describe the extremely luxurious diet.

Not wasting a penny: metaphor is not wasting at all.

Worthless: not a penny. Metaphor is worthless.

Money is like life: treat a penny like life. Metaphor is extremely stingy.

Money talks. Describe that with money, you can do anything. Money makes the mare go.

Being penniless means being penniless. It is often used to describe emptiness or extreme poverty.

Drinking horses and investing money: a metaphor for honesty and integrity, without harming public interests and personal interests.

Money and power: money and power.

A penny stumbles a hero: a small difficulty prevents a major event from being carried out and completed. It also refers to a very capable person who is helpless in the face of a small problem.

Daily food costs tens of thousands of yuan: it costs tens of thousands of yuan to eat and drink every day. Describe life as extremely luxurious.

Money can connect the gods: a metaphor for the great magic of money.

Metaphor of excellent articles.

Bachelor of Green Money: a well-known scholar.

My eyes turn red at the sight of money. Describe a greedy person. It's the same as being greedy.

Fire to the pig's head, money to business:

Money is good for Jia: Jia: Doing business. More capital makes business easier. Metaphor conditions are sufficient, things are easy to handle.

Not a penny: contemptuous words are worthless. Metaphor is incompetence or low character.

No money: Name: Tibetan. Not a penny. Describe extreme poverty.

Worthless: Metaphor is worthless.

Love money like life: Some people love money like life. Describe very greedy and despicable.

Open your eyes to money: When you see money, your eyes will get bigger. Describe a greedy person.

What does it mean to listen to others and not to be scolded?

1 Better late than never.

This story comes from the Warring States Policy. During the Warring States Period, there was a minister in the State of Chu named Zhuang Xin. One day, he said to King Xiang of Chu: "When you were in the palace, Zhou Hou was on the left and Xiahou was on the right; When you went out, Yan Lingjun and Shou Jing Jun followed you all the time. You and these four people are very particular about luxury and debauchery. Regardless of national events, Ying (Chu capital, in the north of jiangling county, Hubei Province) will be in danger! "

Wang Xiang was very dissatisfied and scolded angrily, "Are you crazy? Deliberately saying these insidious words to confuse people? "

Zhuang Xin replied unhurriedly: "I really think things must come to this, and I dare not deliberately say that Chu has any misfortune." If you always cherish this man, Chu will surely perish. Since you don't believe me, please allow me to hide in Zhao and see what will happen. "

Zhuang Xin lived in Zhao Guocai for five months, and the State of Qin invaded Chu, and Wang Xiang was forced into exile in Yangcheng (now northwest of Xixian County, Henan Province). Only then did I feel that Zhuang Xin's words were good, so I quickly sent someone to get Zhuang Xin back and asked him what he could do. ZhuangXin very sincerely say:

"I heard that it's not too late to see rabbit teeth and think of hounds; It's not too late to mend the sheepfold after the sheep have run away. ……"

This is a very meaningful story. You only know how to have fun, not how to do things. The result must be a tragic failure.

The idiom "Better late than never" is based on the above two sentences, which means that if something goes wrong, it's not too late to fix it. For example, a successful person misjudges the development of things, travels light and falls into a state of failure. But he was not discouraged. He thought things over patiently, learned a lesson from this mistake, and thought that it was not too late to "mend after it is late" from scratch!

Two vegetarian meals for cadavers

The history of corpse sound is that a person sat and watched on behalf of an idol in ancient ceremonies without any action.

There is a saying in the Book of Songs: "Taikang corpse". This is the origin of the vegetarian meal in the corpse's position, which is used to describe a person who has a position but has no job, just like a corpse in a sacrificial ceremony, just sitting in the position without doing any action.

Vegetarian food also comes from the Book of Songs: "He is a gentleman, but he is not a vegetarian." Later generations then used "vegetarian meal" as a metaphor for people who have no job to eat. The combination of "vegetarian meal in a corpse" into an idiom should be said to come from Han Shu, because there is such a package in Zhu Yunzhuan in the book: "Today's court ministers, although unable to judge the Lord, all died for the benefit of the people." The meaning of the whole idiom is the same as that mentioned above. In this way, it is necessary to study the origin of idioms and learn more about the origin of this idiom.

Redundant staff in general organs, societies and shops, relying on personnel or other special relations, only know that they get paid on time every month, eat, drink and do nothing every day. Such a person can be said to be a vegetarian meal. In addition, although people with poor working ability do their best to serve, they always fail to do things well and have no accumulation. Such people can keep their jobs not by their own skills, but by special relationships, so they can also be called "vegetarians". For another example, someone told a friend that he had no skills at all, but thanks to the care of his boss, he had been able to solve his life, but he was a vegetarian and his conscience was a little guilty. So to speak, it has become a very decent modesty.

3 Tianya Haijiao

Han Yu, the word "Hui", was a great scholar in the middle Tang Dynasty.

His father died when he was two years old, and his mother died soon after. When he was a child, he relied on his brother and his sister-in-law Zheng. Han Hui has an heir (younger brother, stepson and eldest brother's son) named Lao Cheng, ranking 12, so he is nicknamed Shierlang, and Han Yu is even younger. Later, when Han Hui was forty-two, he was demoted as the secretariat of Shaozhou by Yuan Zai, the prime minister, and died in Shaozhou within a few months. At this time, Han Yu was only eleven years old and Shi Lang was still very young. Although Han Yu had three brothers (Hui, Yang and Jie), they all died very early. At this time, only Han Yu and his nephew Shi Erlang inherited their ancestors and descendants, and they were lonely and inseparable.

Han Yu 19 years old went to Beijing from Yicheng, and only saw Shiro three times in the next ten years. When he was planning to return to the west and live with Shiro forever, unfortunately Shiro died at this time. Han Yu was heartbroken when he learned the news. He wrote a song "Ode to Twelve Lang" and asked Jianzhong to prepare some current affairs articles to pay tribute to him from a distance. This eulogy, a word and a tear, makes people sad to read.

In the eulogy, there are "one on the edge of the sky and one in the corner of the ground." Later generations extended it to "the ends of the earth", which is a metaphor ... >>

What do you mean by fallacy?

Title: fallacy

Pinyin: mi zhǒng

Meaning:

1 refers to absurd and false remarks, academic school, etc. : the spread of fallacies and heresies.

2, bad things: bad people (swearing).

It appeared in Lu Xun's Blessing.

Edit the basic explanation of this paragraph.

1. [Error]: Absurd and wrong remarks, genres, etc.

2. [Bad guy] [Mouth]: Bad guy-swearing words

Edit this paragraph for a detailed explanation.

1. refers to absurd and wrong remarks, academics, etc.

Qing Wei Jing's book "On Mr. Li Fan": "It is a fallacy to drive sheep, do things, harm horses, and not argue." Lin Shu's Preface to the Collection of Shen Wen: "Today, there is a arrogance, arrogance and anger. He shocked people's eyes and ears with strange words, criticizing Tongcheng for being worthless, which is an ignorant fallacy and clear to the peacemakers. " Liu Yazi's song: "Obedience is fun, and fallacies are endless."

2. swearing. Bad things; Bad guys.

Lu Xun's "Blessing of Wandering": "Only the fourth uncle left and said loudly,' It's neither too early nor too late, but at this time-this is a fallacy. Ren Wu Bin's Silent Haug: It's a fallacy and outrageous. "

What is the difference between idioms and words, such as meaning and literal meaning?

The so-called idioms are fixed phrases formed by long-term use and tempering in the language, which fully embodies the profoundness of Chinese. It is a language unit larger than a word, and its grammatical function is equivalent to a word. Idioms are fixed phrases or sentences expressing general concepts, which are mostly composed of four words.

Features: ① The structure is relatively stereotyped. (2) the integrity of meaning. ③ Habituality of time and space. ④ Historicity of formation. ⑤ Nationality of content and form.

Source: ① Historical stories. 2 fables. (3) Myths or other legends. 4 classic literary works.

Idioms are a part of stereotyped phrases or short sentences in language vocabulary. Chinese idioms have fixed structural forms and fixed expressions, which express certain meanings and are used as a whole in sentences. For example:

Concise and brave, on the contrary, seeking truth from facts.

I tirelessly teach people. After years of hard work, I am eager to find a fish.

Cut your feet and fit your shoes. Too many chefs don't donate, just sit by and watch the sky.

A large part of idioms are passed down from ancient times, and they are often different from modern Chinese in terms of words. There are sentences from ancient books, phrases compressed from ancient articles and idioms from people's mouths. Some meanings can be understood literally, while others can't, especially allusions. Such as "full of sweat and cows", "crouching tiger, hidden dragon", "making a comeback" and "being surrounded by grass and trees" occupy a certain proportion in Chinese idioms. China has a long history and many idioms, which is also a feature of Chinese.

Idioms are ready-made words, similar to idioms and proverbs, but slightly different. The most important point is that idioms and proverbs are spoken, while idioms are mostly written and belong to literary nature. Secondly, in the form of language, idioms are almost all established four-word structures, and literal words cannot be changed at will, while idioms and proverbs are always loose, more or less limited to four words. For example, "cut the gordian knot", "donkey's lips are not right for the horse's mouth" and "fear the wolf before and the tiger after" are all common idioms. Seeing is believing, true gold is not afraid of fire, where there is a will, there is a way, and it takes a long time to see people's hearts. These are some experiences that express a complete meaning and belong to the category of proverbs. Idioms are different from idioms and proverbs.

Most idioms have a certain origin. For example, "Smith" comes from the Chu policy of the Warring States Policy, "fighting between snipes and mussels" comes from strict policy, "painting a snake to add feet" comes from Qi policy, "carving a boat to seek a sword" comes from Lu Chunqiu's investigation of Jin, and "contradiction" comes from everything that goes wrong. For example, Return to Zhao in a Perfect Way comes from Historical Records, biographies of Lian Po and Lin Xiangru, cross the rubicon from Historical Records, biographies of Xiang Yu, vegetation and soldiers from Jin Shu Fu Jian, killing two birds with one stone from Northern History, and full of honey and belly sword from biographies of Tang Shufu. As for the interception of ancient books, it is more common as a four-character idiom. For example, "methodical" is taken from Shangshu Pan Geng, Outline in an orderly way, Draw inferences from the Analects of Confucius, Don't take a corner, there will be no more, and Regret for the Past is taken from Zuozhuan's thirteen-year successful study. "Being servile" comes from Bao Puzi's Newsletter by Ge Hong in Jin Dynasty, "Taking the Yue family as the only one who is unsmiling, and taking the servile person as the worldly knowledge", and "Being confident" comes from Su Shi's "Drawing Scenery and Painting Valley and Colorful Bamboo" in Song Dynasty. Wait, the list goes on. There are also many people who make sentences in ancient Chinese. For example, worrying comes from The Book of Songs, being strong on the outside and being dry on the inside comes from Zuo Zhuan's Fifteen Years of Xi Gong, waiting for merit comes from Sun Tzu's The Art of War, getting to the bottom of it comes from Su Shi's Fu on the Back Red Wall, and meeting by chance comes from Wang Bo's Preface to Tengwangge in Tang Dynasty.

Some four-character idioms that people often use can also be classified as idioms. Such as "speaking like a book", "procrastinating", "disobedience", "no three no four" and "speaking directly" are all idioms. There are also some idioms that appear by accepting foreign cultures. For example, hype, explosion, incredible and the only way.

Idioms are generally four-character, not too few. For example, castles in the air, famous, shining on you, colorful and joyous, are all four-character idioms. Idioms with less than four words, such as "knocking at the door", "unwarranted" and "thinking" >>

What's the difference between penniless and penniless?

Idiom: penniless

Pronunciation: y and wén bémíng

Explanation: There is no money at all. Describe it as poor. Name: Possession.

Source: Sima Qian in the Western Han Dynasty, "Historical Records and Biographies of Fortunately Deng Tong": "I can't be named, and I will die."

Example:

Sima Qian's Biography of Deng Tong in Historical Records in the Western Han Dynasty: "You can't punish it by name."

If he has money, give those people some bribes and send a package of' cigarette money', and it will pass; But he ~.

Yang Mo's Song of Youth Chapter 265438, Part II +0