A collection of four-character idioms about why why?
1. A complete collection of four-character idioms: "Know what you know"
Be content with what you have,
Know the autumn with a leaf,
Study things to gain knowledge,
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Unity of knowledge and action,
Self-knowledge of warmth and coldness,
Knowing the law and breaking the law,
Knowing the subtleties,
< p> Return from the lost path,Unknowingly,
At a loss,
True knowledge,
Unknown,
p>Tell everything you know,
Self-knowledge,
Indifferent and shameless,
Know yourself and the enemy,
The grace of knowing and encountering,
Having only a little knowledge,
Not understanding what is being said,
Knowing before committing the crime,
Reviewing the past and learning the new,
Easier to know than to do,
As we all know,
Be foresight,
Retreat from difficulties,
Know people and judge the world,
Fallen leaves know autumn,
Know people well and do their job well,
Women and children all know,
Know nothing 2. A complete collection of four-character idioms: what is the word?
Gossip, sweet talk, talking to oneself, a few words, sweet talk 1. Gossip [liú yán fēi yǔ] definition: refers to unfounded words.
Mostly refers to the slanderous and bad words spread behind the scenes. Source: Yang Shuo's "The Fishing Flute": Rumors spread among the villagers that the widow of the Xia family was not decent and immoral.
2. Sweet talk [huā yán qiǎo yǔ] Definition: It originally refers to words or articles that are extravagant and decorated with empty content. Later, it mostly refers to false and beautiful words used to deceive people.
Source: Lu Xun's "A Collection of Abominable Crimes": I think that many crimes in the law are just rhetoric, and there is only one word to cover them, which is: abominable crimes. 3. Talk to oneself [ zì yán zì yǔ ] meaning: talk to oneself; talk in a low voice alone.
Source: The fourth chapter of "The Peach Blossom Girl" by Anonymous Yuan: "You are such a naughty person, talking to yourself here, are you going to go out of the city to chop down the peach tree?" 4. 三言语 [sān yán liǎng yǔ] Definition: Refers to a few sentences: This issue is very complicated and cannot be explained clearly in a few words. Source: Chapter 53 of "The Appearance of Officialdom" by Li Baojia of the Qing Dynasty: If I, a veteran, hadn't subdued him with a few words, I don't know what trouble would have happened.
5. Sweet words [tián yán mì yǔ] Definition: Nice words spoken in order to please or deceive others. Source: Volume 36 of "Eternal Words to Awaken the World" by Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty: Bian Fu sat next to him and talked sweetly and persuaded him.