All football
Fence tactics
Cross transposition
zone defence
total defence
Insertion attack
counterattack
Peripheral afferent gyrus
Throw a foul ball and answer.
Long ball
Lower rolling groove
Sink and pass
Long-range raid
The fish jumped to the top
Overpass save the ball
salvo
Bicycle kick
Trailing central defender
Lianzhong sanzhu
Cloth roll calendering process
Head-on robbery
Flank pass
Disrupt the defense
Procrastination/procrastination/procrastination strategy
Control midfield
technical foul
Man-to-man defense
Red card sent off
Leg lifts too high.
(of basketball) block
match ban
send off
half time
The audience is over
Second, idioms about football.
Idiom: yellow card warning
Pinyin: huáng pái jǐng gào
Explanation: It means that the referee should show a yellow card to the players who return for serious fouls in the football match, and it also means to remind and warn people.
Source:
I have warned him with a yellow card.
Pinyin code: hpjg
Synonym:
Antonym:
Xiehouyu:
Lantern riddle: intentional foul in ball games
Usage: as predicate, object and attribute; Finger reminder
English: warning
Three idioms about playing football in the past.
Proximity: basic explanation: even number: even number; Enemy: quite. The strength of both sides is equal, regardless of height.
Pinyin version: Yes √ All
Zhan
plum
Dee
For example, the game was tied.
Synonym group: comparable, diamond cut diamond.
Antonym group: the world is different and outnumbered.
Use: combined; As predicate and attribute; Used on both sides of a conflict.
The origin of the idiom: Biography of Southern History Liu Mu: "The enemy is evenly matched, and it will eventually swallow its mouth."
tie
hair
sound
bù
(of eggs) with a soft yolk
promote/begin/get up/perhaps/a surname/interest
fù
Antonym: Fight or die.
Similar words are evenly matched.
appear
everywhere
Wu Ming Cheng En and the Fourth Journey to the West: "the Monkey King's golden hoop has become a million Qian Qian. Midair is like raindrops and meteors, regardless of the outcome. "
use
Law is predicate, adverbial and attribute; It's even.
Idiom story
During the Three Kingdoms period, Zhang Fei heard that Ma Chao was coming to attack Jia Mengguan, and immediately led the troops to fight. Unexpectedly, Ma Dai was the only one who hit him. Zhang Fei was unhappy and sent Ma Dai back to the enemy camp. The horse went outside the camp to fight, and Liu Bei came to see it. The two sides are neck and neck in hundreds of rounds of war. After playing more than 20 rounds in the evening, it was still a draw.
Four idioms about football
The potential is heavy, the potential is like a broken bamboo, and the potential is like a shadow.
Five, one person catches a lot of football and guesses idioms.
Be overwhelmed [yē ngji bù xiá] Explanation: Leisure: leisure. There were so many descriptions of the scenery that it was too late to read it. Later, people are often described as going back and forth or having too many things to answer to cope with.
Said by Liu Yiqing in the Southern Dynasties, "Shi Shuo Xin Yu" said: "From the mountains, the mountains and rivers correspond to each other, which is overwhelming."
Example: the car ran to Shennongjia mountain area, only to see strange peaks and strange mountains coming on, which made people ~.
Grammar: subject-predicate type; As predicate and attribute; Include praise
source
In the Northern and Southern Dynasties, Liu Yiqing's "Shi Shuo Xin Yu": "From the mountain * * *; Mountains and rivers set each other off; People are overwhelmed. "
example sentence
The information desk at the railway station is crowded with people and staff.
What idioms are there about football?
What everyone upstairs said is good, but they are all platitudes, familiar and household names! ! !
Now the most popular is the famous saying of the great emperor, which has just been included in the right idiom dictionary for a long time:
My ball protection is like Henry! ! !
This is a classic! !
Add a few latest ones: don't make faces, be as fast as lightning, and change consistently.
What idioms are there about football?
Yellow card warning: refers to the referee's special yellow card for athletes who commit serious fouls in football matches, and also refers to reminding and warning people.
Yellow card warning: refers to the referee showing a yellow card to a player who commits a serious foul in a football match as a warning, and also refers to reminding and warning people.
Yellow card warning: refers to the referee showing a yellow card to a player who commits a serious foul in a football match as a warning, and also refers to reminding and warning people.
Eight idioms related to football
A hat trick of closing the door with one foot upside down, two goals and one arrow to seal the throat
Centennial arc of lower mouth full moon machete
Stand out from the crowd: refers to a player who scores all the goals in a game.
Riding the dust: refers to the team that is far ahead in the league standings.
Double ghost slap: refers to two players grabbing points in front of each other at the same time.
Inverted hook: that's what we often say: barb shooting.
The lion tossed his head: usually used to describe a powerful header attack.
Shock mountain and tiger: generally speaking, it refers to a powerful shot from a long distance.
Beyond the reach of the whip: usually used on the goalkeeper, referring to the opponent's shooting angle, the goalkeeper can only watch the ball roll into the goal.
Nine idioms about playing football
1, rampage: describes rampage, also called rampage. Starting from "Continuing to burn books and writing with friends", all essays are attacked from the outside. When you answered me, the article attacked from time to time, and he was the city, eating his hay, commanding his military forces, rushing into the ground and stirring him to pieces. Naturally, there was more than one effort.
2. distract the tiger from the mountain: describe using tricks to make the other party leave the original place so as to take the opportunity to act. Judging from the eighty-eighth chapter of the Romance of the Gods, Ziya Gong must use his own tactics to transfer the tiger on the mountain and succeed in World War I.
3. Get there first: describe a person who quickly achieves his goal or gets what he wants first. According to the legend of Jiqingtu, the so-called Qin people lost the deer and got it first.
4, a hundred steps through the poplar: describe shooting willow leaves a hundred steps away, archery or marksmanship is very clever. According to the Records of Historical Records Zhou Benji, Chu has Yang, and those who are good at shooting are also good at shooting, shooting at willow leaves with a hundred paces and shooting at it with a hundred shots. In the Warring States Policy and the Strategy of Western Zhou Dynasty, the State of Chu has Yang, who is good at shooting, and shoots willow leaves with a hundred paces.
5, cut to the chase: describe the direct penetration with a short-handled knife. The original metaphor is to find the right target, be brave and diligent, and the latter metaphor is to speak directly and not beat around the bush. From the Legend of Jingdezhen Lights, Volume XII, if the author is a great warrior, please come straight to the point, not to mention what to do.
What idioms are there about football?