It's a deal, nothing, single-minded, harmonious, meticulous, indomitable, bon voyage, a blockbuster.
Little knowledge, year after year, motionless, helpless, bit by bit, quite critical, nothing, a skill.
Go your own way, a year or so, take in everything in a glance, one violence and ten cold, and write it off.
Silent, as always, uncharacteristically, exactly the same, once and for all, occasionally, consistently, wishful thinking.
I'm a fool, I don't know anything, I limp, I echo from a distance, I'm in a mess, I'm smooth sailing, everything is clear at a glance, and I'm swept away
Setting, nothing, generalization, immutability, everything is available.
A promise as good as a promise, a loose and a progressive, endless, everywhere, devastated, fragmented, dispersed in a hubbub.
Come down in one continuous line, love at first sight, high-spirited, profitable, in every word and deed, walk away, blind, see Mount Tai.
No pains, no gains, no pillars.
The concept of idioms:
Idioms are stereotypes in Chinese vocabulary. Idioms, everyone says they have become words, and so do idioms. Idioms are mostly four-character, and some are three-character, five-character or even more than seven-character.
Idiom is a major feature of traditional culture in China, which has a fixed structure and a fixed sentence, indicating a certain meaning. It is applied to a sentence as a whole, with subject, object, attribute and other components. A large part of idioms are passed down from ancient times and represent a story or allusion.
Idiom is a ready-made word, similar to idioms and proverbs, but slightly different. Idioms are a bright pearl in China culture.