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A short sentence that is said without making things clear.
1. Describe a sentence that makes random comments before you know the situation

Idiom: hearsay

Pinyin: dào tīng tú shuō

Explanation: Tao, way: road. Words heard on the road and spread on the road. Generally refers to unfounded rumors.

Source: The Analects of Confucius, Yang Huo: "Hearsay is the way to talk, and morality is abandoned." History of Han, Art and Literature: "Novelists flow because of officials, gossip in the streets, and hearsay."

example: sister ~, I wonder if it is? Instructions are still needed. ★ The Fifty-third Session of Qing Li Ruzhen's Flowers in the Mirror

Synonyms: gossip, catching the wind and catching the shadows, and overseas anecdotes

antonyms: well-founded, well-founded and well-founded

Two-part allegorical saying: the street is believed and the street is passed on

Grammar: as subject, object and attribute; Refers to the rumor

Idiom: Catch the wind and catch the shadow

Pinyin: bǔ fēng zhuō yǐng

Explanation: neither wind nor shadow can be caught. Metaphor has no factual basis in speaking and doing things.

Source: Records of Sacrifice to the Suburb in the History of Han Dynasty: "Listen to his words, and you will meet them if you will;" If you ask for it, you can't get it if you swing like a wind. " "The Complete Book of Zhu Zi": "If you don't do it for a long time, if you catch the wind and catch the shadows, how much progress will you make?"

Example: If the victim asks for the reason why he offended one by one, ~, fabricate rumors. ★ Ming Zhang Juzheng's Begging for Distinguishing Loyalty and Evil to Determine the Country's Prosperity

Synonyms: catching shadows from the wind, making things out of nothing, and hearsay

antonyms: seeking truth from facts, hearing and seeing, and being firm

Two-part allegorical saying: a dog bites a whirlwind;

grammar: as predicate, attribute and adverbial; The idiom

jump to conclusions without making things clear

wàng xià cí huáng

explains the words and makes comments indiscriminately.

The source is Yan Zhitui's "Yan Family Instructions Mianxue": "How easy is it to proofread books? Since Yang Xiong Liu Xiangfang called this post. If you don't read the book in the world, you can't swear by orpiment. "

structural verb-object type.

usage is used as a derogatory term. Generally used as predicate and object.

discriminating females; Can't write words.

Synonyms talk nonsense

Antonyms are reasonable and well-founded

Examples like you ~; Disturbing behavior should be criticized. 3. What words are used to describe "jumping to a conclusion without making things clear"

taken out of context, looking at the meaning of the text, being far-fetched, pulling and pulling, and having a single opinion

1. taken out of context [duà n zhā ng q ǔ y ǔ]

Explanation: cut off; Chapter: Music is a chapter. It refers to taking the meaning of a paragraph or sentence in isolation regardless of the content of the whole article or conversation. Refers to the quotation is inconsistent with the original intention.

from: Zuo Qiu-ming's Twenty-eight Years of Zuo Zhuan Xiang Gong in the Spring and Autumn Period: "Poems are out of context, and I want nothing more."

Translation: Poetry is out of context, and I take what I seek.

Second, looking at the text gives birth to meaning [wàng wén shēng yì]

Explanation: text: words, meaning literally; Meaning: meaning. If you don't know the exact meaning of a word, you will be far-fetched literally and make an inaccurate explanation.

from: Qing Zhang Zhidong's "Xuan Xuan Yu Linguistics": "Empty talk and speculation, hope for business."

It's far-fetched to start talking casually without anything.

Third, it's far-fetched [qi ā n qi ∥ ng f ∥ hu]

Explanation: It's hard to say that something that doesn't have some meaning has some meaning. It also refers to pulling unrelated things together and confusing them.

from: Lu Xun's "The History of Grave and Man": "It seems that the ancient Greek philosophers are not ignorant of this idea, but after that, they are far-fetched."

Fourth, drag and pull [sh ē ng l ā y ? ch ě]

Explanation: metaphor is far-fetched, dragging and dragging.

from: Cao Yu's Sunrise, Act IV: "Fu Shengsheng dragged Shengsan Huang out alive."

5. Views from a hole [y and k ǒ ng zh and jià n]

Explanation: What I saw from a small hole. Metaphor is a narrow and one-sided view.

from: Huan Kuan's "On Salt and Iron": "Stick to the rules instead of the rules, stick to the rules instead of the rope, make a hole, understand the reason, and don't know the balance."

stick to the plan rather than the rules, grasp the rope accurately rather than through a hole, and only know one truth, but don't know the balance. 4. describe things and pretend to be b's famous sayings

The epigrams of learning endless famous sayings are as follows: 1. There is no way to learn from the mountains, and there is no limit to learning from the sea.

On the road of reading and studying, there is no shortcut and no boat sailing with the wind. If you want to gain more and wider knowledge in the vast mountain of books and learning, "diligence" and "assiduousness" are essential. This poem can be used as a motto to inspire young people from generation to generation.

even if you are not smart in your studies, you will gain something and succeed only if you are diligent and persistent. 2, I feel shallow on paper, and I don't know that this matter should be done.

I feel shallow after learning from the paper, and I never know that this matter needs to be done-from Reading on a Winter Night, written by Lu You. This is a godson poem by Lu You, named Reading on a Winter Night and Showing the Son Yu, which was written at the end of the fifth year of Qingyuan in Song Ningzong (AD 1199).

The poet talked about his own views on the acquisition of knowledge from two aspects: one is to spend effort, and the other is to "practice". The thought expressed in the poem is not only the experience of reading in winter night, but also the summary of the poet's diligent study.

3. Black hair doesn't know how to study early, while white head regrets studying late. Yan Zhenqing, a great calligrapher and poet in the Tang Dynasty, wrote a wonderful sentence in "Encouraging Learning".

the whole poem is: "The lights are on at five o'clock in the middle of the night, which is when men are studying. Black hair doesn't know how to study hard early, and Bai Shoufang regrets studying late. "

"Black hair doesn't know how to study hard early, and white head regrets how to study late" means: If you don't know how to study hard and study hard when you are young, I'm afraid it's too late to know how to study hard when you are old, and it's too late to regret it.