In order to make the pronunciation clear, English uses the subject-predicate method; As predicate, attribute, object. Pay attention and release to leave: borrow. The fox pretended to be a tiger. Metaphor relies on the strength of others to bully others. For relevant information, see Feng Menglong's Warning to the World, Zhao regards Cao Guzhuang: "Seeing the middleman as a half creditor, you need to get it endlessly." "Sure enough, the house to borrow, how good not to borrow? I am afraid that I will be trusted by others, but this will not protect him. " Ling Mengchu's "The Second Moment Surprise" (Volume 20) in the early Ming Dynasty is synonymous with bullying the city, and the antonym is chinese odyssey, who is good at winning. 1 When the puppy sees its owner nearby, it will bark at the big dog like a fox at once. It is the last word that you have real talent and practical learning, and there is no future just following the leaders. King Jing Xuan asked his minister (Smith)
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Wang Jianfeng's Description of Idioms —— Smith's Imitation.
This is a well-known fable, which tells that the fox escaped from the tiger's mouth by his own intelligence. Later used to refer to bullying people by relying on their power. The cunning fox scares others in the forest with the tiger's prestige, but the cunning tactics can never make the fox change his weak nature. Once the trick is poked, it will not only be besieged by wild animals, but also swallowed by the deceived tiger. The extension shows that the bad guys who bully others can be arrogant for a while, but in the end they will never have a good end.
meaning
The fox pretended to be a tiger. Now people use it to mean to bully others by relying on others' strength. It also satirizes those who use other people's power to cheat. A person who uses the influence of others or the power of his position to bully others is Smith.