Current location - Quotes Website - Team slogan - The significance of gas-filled bullfighting
The significance of gas-filled bullfighting
Bullfighting uses qi to describe anger or momentum, which comes from Tang's "Chanting Sword" and Song's "Tiaoqing Mud Red Cliff".

Inflated bullfighting is used to describe people's psychological state. So when a person is angry about bullfighting, what is his mood? The following is to introduce the meaning of gas-rushed bullfighting, and to introduce the origin of the idiom in detail and provide some examples, hoping to help you better understand this idiom.

Details 0 1

Inflatable bullfighting comes from Tang Cuirong's "Chanting Sword": "The box gas rushes to the bullfighting, and the mountain turns to the pulley." And the poem entitled "Green Mud and Red Cliff" in Song Dynasty: "The heroic spirit is proud and the oath is true." 02

Inflatable bullfighting means to describe anger or momentum.

Qi: momentum; Niudou: Altair and Big Dipper refer to the sky. 03

Text source:

Selected from the second lesson of the second volume of the seventh grade Chinese textbook edited by Cang Kejia, "Words and deeds of Mr. Wen Yiduo".

Sentence source: Paragraph 16: He said. What a wonderful speech! This is touching, inspiring and exciting! 04

Synonym: angry hair rushing to the crown, gas flowing through Changhong.

Antonym: humble and humble.

Example:

1, when Lu heard that Kansai Town had captured women, he immediately glared at the bullfighting.

2. The other three were also angry bullfights, and it took a long time for everyone's mood to calm down.