Current location - Quotes Website - Famous sayings - Idioms and sayings about black and white
Idioms and sayings about black and white

1. Confusion of black and white

Idiom pinyin: hēi bái hùn xiáo

Idiom explanation: say black as white, white as black . It is a metaphor for deliberately confusing right and wrong and creating confusion.

The source of the idiom: "Book of the Later Han Dynasty·Yang Zhen Biography": "White and black are confused, and clear and turbid have the same origin."?

2. There is no distinction between black and white

Idiom Pinyin: hēi bái bù fēn

Idiom explanation: Black and White: Black and white are metaphors for right and wrong, good and evil. Can't tell the difference between black and white. It is a metaphor for not distinguishing between right and wrong, good and bad.

The source of the idiom: Zhao Shuli's "The Changes of Lijiazhuang": "It is a pity that the investigation of a soil-selling committee member and the statement of Xiao Mao made the matter indistinguishable from right to wrong."?

3 , reverse black and white

Idiom pinyin: diān dǎo hēi bái

Explanation of the idiom: turn black into white; turn white into black. Metaphor deliberately distorts facts; confuses right and wrong.

The source of the idiom: "Nine Chapters of the Songs of Chu" by Qu Yuan of the Warring States Period: "When it becomes white, it is considered black; when it falls, it is considered down."?

4. Orpiment, black and white

Idiom Pinyin: cí huáng hēi bái

Explanation of the idiom: orpiment: casually speaking; black and white: black and white. It means making judgments and making random accusations.

The source of the idiom: Chapter 79 of Cai Dongfan's "Popular Romance of the Republic of China": "Orange and black and white, as if there is no one around."?

5. Black and white are clear

Pinyin of the idiom: hēi bái fēn míng

Idiom explanation: black, white: two colors of black and white; Ming: clear. Black and white are clearly distinguishable. The metaphor distinguishes right from wrong, good and bad very clearly.

The source of the idiom: "Spring and Autumn Fanlu Guanquanquan" by Dong Zhongshu of the Han Dynasty: "Black and white are clear, and then the people will know where to go."

Extended information:

Contains Colored words:

1. Push through the clouds and see the blue sky

Explanation: Only by pushing away the dense clouds can you see the blue sky. It is a metaphor for breaking through the darkness and seeing the light.

2. Blue sea and blue sky?

Interpretation: It originally described Chang'e's lonely and desolate mood as she looked at the vast blue sea and blue sky in Guanghan Palace every night. Later, it is a metaphor for a woman's steadfastness in love.

3. Half green and half yellow?

Interpretation: The crops have not grown well yet, and green and yellow are connected. The metaphor is not ripe yet.

4. Youth comes from blue and is better than blue?

Source: Yang Mo's "Song of Youth" Part 2, Chapter 36 "Qing comes from blue and is better than blue. Xiao Lin, why should Lao Jiang send Let me help you?"

Interpretation: Green is extracted from blue grass, but the color is darker than blue grass

5. Colorful?

Interpretation: Five colors refer to the five colors of green, yellow, red, white and black. Refers to a variety of colors that are complex and dazzling.