Current location - Quotes Website - Famous sayings - Idiom Application-College Entrance Examination Chinese
Idiom Application-College Entrance Examination Chinese
Give back peaches-exchange gifts/favors

Explanation: It means that he gives me peaches and I give him plums in return. A metaphor for friendly exchanges or mutual gifts.

From: The Book of Songs: "Give me a peach and give me a plum."

Example: This is inevitable. We should avoid taking Xiu De as one thing, but say that it is moral and people should abide by the law. ◎ Biography of Song Zhuxi's Poems Volume 18

Synonym: Politeness comes and goes.

Grammar: combination; As predicate and attribute; Include praise

Make promises easily, but rarely keep them.

If you agree to others' demands easily, you will rarely keep your promise.

Chapter 63 of Laozi: "It is easy and difficult for a husband to break his promise lightly."

For example, my family is not. (Qing Pu Songling's Strange Tales from a Lonely Studio Impatiens)

Synonym: keep one's promise. Antonym: Keep your word.

Grammatical abbreviation; As predicate, object and attribute; derogatory sense

Initiator: a metaphor for the initiator of bad atmosphere.