1. Poems about carelessness
Poems about carelessness 1. Quotes about carelessness
Quotation 1:
Lose it A millimeter is a thousand miles.
It means that although the difference is small, the error or error caused is huge.
Millimeter and centimeter: two extremely small units of length. A slight mistake can lead to big mistakes. "Book of Rites·Jingjing": ""The Book of Changes" says: 'A gentleman should be cautious in his beginnings. A mistake as small as a hair's breadth would lead to a mistake of a thousand miles.'"
Famous Famous Word 2:
If you are careless, you will lose Jingzhou.
It means carelessness, pride and underestimation of the enemy.
During the Three Kingdoms period, Zhuge Liang sent Guan Yu to guard Jingzhou. Guan Yu sent troops to attack Cao Cao, but Sun Quan took advantage of the situation and attacked Jingzhou, causing Jingzhou to fall.
Now it is a metaphor for failure or loss due to negligence. It can be used to advise others not to be "careless and lose Jingzhou"; it can also be used to defend one's own mistakes, such as: I was "careless and lost Jingzhou".
Famous Quote 3:
One misstep can lead to eternal hatred.
An old metaphor that once a serious mistake or fall is made, it becomes a lifelong hatred.
From "Ming Liang Ji" written by Yang Yi of the Ming Dynasty: "Since Tang Jieyuan Yin was abandoned, the poem goes: 'One mistake will lead to eternal hatred, and another one will be a hundred years old.'" and Wei Zian's "Flower Moon" in the Qing Dynasty "Traces": "If you make a mistake, you will be hated for eternity, and if you look back, it will be a hundred years old.". It is a metaphor that once you make a serious mistake or fall, it will become a lifelong regret.
Famous Quote 4:
A thousand-mile embankment is destroyed by an ant nest.
It means that a small ant hole can destroy a thousand-mile dike. A metaphor for not paying attention to small things can cause big troubles.
Famous Quote 5:
Our careless mistake is that we often do not know how to value the valuable things we have. We do not realize their true value until we lose them. Our unreasonable hatred often hurts our friends and then weeps at their graves. ——Shakespeare
2. What verse warns people not to be careless in doing things?
Nothing in the world is difficult, only those who are willing to do it; nothing in the world is easy, only those who are careless.
The first sentence was written by Yuan Meihua, a poet of the Qing Dynasty, using a proverb.
Once you make a mistake, you will laugh forever, and if you look back, you will be a hundred years old.
From the Notes of Song Dynasty
When a dead fish crosses the river and weeps, when will it regret again? Write a book and teach each other to be careful when coming in and out.
From an ancient Yuefu poem
The following is no longer a poem, it is similar to a proverb
Caution can catch cicadas of thousands of years, and caution can sail a ship of ten thousand years
Don’t do the things you are proud of anymore, and don’t stay in the cheap places anymore.
A bird looks twice before flying, and a man thinks twice before flying.
Words and actions are like chess moves, one move means three moves.
Be sure to think twice before you act and think twice before speaking
3. Verses describing carelessness
Losing things to describe things that are sloppy or careless or having a poor memory. Meticulous. Numbness means carelessness, negligence, insensitivity to things, and loss of vigilance. Move home and forget your wife. Move: move; zhai: residence. Move and forget to take your wife away. It is a metaphor for being careless to the point of absurdity. Losing things to describe things that are careless or careless or careless. Having a poor memory and neglecting one thing and doing something hastily means hastily: describing carelessness and sloppiness; 了: finishing, ending. To end things hastily. To withdraw troops hastily and to withdraw troops carelessly. It is a metaphor for irresponsible, careless and careless work. To live in the grass Kusama: in the grass. It describes just trying to survive in a careless manner. To engage in carelessly: to be careless and perfunctory. To deal with it carelessly. To describe work without seriousness. To withdraw troops hastily means to deal with things carelessly and in a hurry. It’s over. Careless: Careless. Refers to doing things sloppily and without care. Shoddy: Too much, without restraint. Writing articles or making things carelessly, only focusing on quantity, regardless of quality. Perfunctory: doing things without seriousness. ; done: finished. Refers to doing things carelessly and just trying to get by. Cutting corners originally refers to businessmen secretly lowering the quality of products and cutting down on materials in order to make huge profits. Now it also refers to doing things in an effort to save trouble, being careless and perfunctory. To deal with things carelessly and to get rid of the blame. Done.