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The more wit, the less courage.
The more wit, the less courage. From "Zhuangzi Knowing the North Tour": "Virtue must be beautiful, Taoism must be expensive, and the eyes are like new calves, regardless of the reasons." Metaphor young people worry less and dare to do it.

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Edit the pinyin of this idiom: h incarnation.

Interpretation: Metaphorically, young people have less concerns and dare to do it. It also means inexperience, ignorance of danger and recklessness. Calf: Calf

Ex.: What these boys say and do is really ~.

The more wit, the less courage.

English: The more wisdom, the less courage.

Japanese: Blind (めくら )へびにぉじず

Usage: ancient times

Structure: Complex sentence patterns

Rhyming words: seeking ancestors, for the soil, thousands of miles of bones, Leiwa kettle, forgetting ancestors, singing and dancing butterflies, climbing today to forget the past, forgetting the past, rotting stems and bones, and cracking the soil. ...

Other uses "Dear, it's true that newborn calves are not afraid of tigers!" The questioner waved inexplicably.

Not afraid of a low starting point, but afraid of a low ambition. "Newborn calves are not afraid of tigers. He bravely took his own steps and walked towards the sacred and distant hall of science.

Unlike Sangtian, Zhao Weigang has just started working for less than a year. He has both the courage of a newborn calf and the ambition to achieve something.

It is precisely because of this that in recent years, apart from writing some articles on occasions, I have never written a pen, nor have I had the momentum of "newborn calves are not afraid of tigers" in the past.

Part-of-speech symbols: nouns; Time nouns; Positional nouns; Place nouns; Name; Surname; Name; Place names; Name of the institution; Other proper nouns; Verb; Conjunctive verbs; A willing verb; Directional verbs; Adjectives; Distinguishing words; Numbers; Quantifier; Adverbs; Pronouns; Preposition; Conjunction; Auxiliary words; Sigh; Onomatopoeic words; Idioms; Abbreviation; Pretreatment components; Subsequent components; Morpheme words; Non-morpheme words.

One of the twenty common sayings has been compiled into the syllabus of 20 1 1 senior high school entrance examination.

Edit the source of this idiom "Zhuangzi's Travel to the North": "Virtue will make you beautiful, and Taoism will make you live in peace, and your eyes are like new calves, regardless of the reason." Ming Luo Guan Zhong's Romance of the Three Kingdoms: "As the saying goes, newborn calves are not afraid of tigers. Even if his father beheaded this man, he was only a pawn of Xiqiang; If there is any trouble, it is not that important to my uncle. " [1] Edit this idiom. For example, Tian Dan is seventeen. As the saying goes, "the newborn calf is not afraid of tigers", so he urged the horse to clear the way and rushed to kill him. Xu Ming Lin Zhong's Love of Gods: Back to the Seventy-third Session

At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, Liu Bei seized Hanzhong from Cao Cao, claiming the title of king, and ordered Guan Yu to take Xiangyang from the north and enter Fancheng. Guan Yu led Liao Hua and Guan Ping to attack Xiangyang, while Cao Cao led Coss to resist. As a result, he was defeated and retreated to Fancheng. Cao Cao sent general Yu Jin as the general to levy south, with the brave general Pound as the pioneer, and led the troops to Fancheng for rescue.

Pound led the vanguard troops to Fancheng, and let the soldiers walk in front of the team carrying coffins to fight Guan Yu to the death. Pound bullied others and asked Guan Yu to beat him by name. Guan Yu went to war, and the two men fought for more than 100 rounds, regardless of the outcome, and the two armies each sounded their golden bells to retreat. When Guan Yu returned to the camp, he said to Guan Ping, "Pound is a brave general in Cao Ying because of his skillful knife cutting." Guan Ping said: "As the saying goes, newborn calves are not afraid of tigers." You can't despise him! The idiom "newborn calves are not afraid of tigers" here means that the brave general Pound has just been born and is unstoppable. Never underestimate your enemy.

Guan Yu felt that it was difficult to defeat Pound by force for a while, so he came up with a plan. At that time, the autumn rain continued, the Hanshui River soared, and Wei Jun Camp was stuck in a low-lying place. Guan Yu dug the Hanshui levee, flooded the seven armies, and escaped to the Forbidden City and Pound. When Yu Jin surrendered, Pound refused to give in until he knelt down. Guan Yu advised him to surrender, but Pound cursed instead. So Guan Yu ordered Pound to be killed.

This is the meaning and origin of newborn calves being afraid of tigers. In fact, in the story, we can see that this sentence has existed for a long time, otherwise it is impossible for Guan Ping to say "common cloud", but it is impossible to verify who said it before. Guan Ping is the first person with historical data, so this sentence is considered to be the source of this idiom.

Edit the related idioms in this paragraph. The original metaphor is a newly emerged foot. Now it is a metaphor for leaving home or school to work. Lack of experience. "Romance of the Three Kingdoms" Chapter 39: "Be brave enough to break Cao Gong's courage and make the first contribution when you are young." That silly boy is "~", we can definitely sweep him away! (Lu Xun's "Like Gao Old Master Q")

A budding metaphor of CHL fng máng is just beginning to show strength or talent. He won the first place in this competition.

At first, the meaning of Huang Ting's chxi Huáng tíng was just right. The post Huang Ting Jing written by Wei Jin people is a model for future generations to learn to write lower case letters. According to legend, "writing Huang Ting at the beginning is just right".