Mobimo is a four-character idiom
1. Qiu is not a four-character idiom
1. Comfortable home: generally referred to as a comfortable place to live.
2. The thing in the cup: the thing in the cup refers to wine. Du Fu has a poem that goes: "If you have something in the cup, you will still be the same as the gulls on the sea."
3. Follow the dust: The dust raised when walking refers to following and imitating others. 4. Chujiujiao: Chujiujiao, a wooden stick and a stone mortar for pounding things.
It is later said that one does not have to be too poor to make friends. 5. Dropping the book bag: Dropping the book bag means liking to use words or sentences from books in conversation.
6. Host: Originally refers to the host on the east road, later referred to as the host who entertains guests. 7. Prank: Playing tricks on others excessively.
8. Wind in the ears: The wind blowing by the ears is a metaphor for words that you don’t take to heart after hearing them. 9. Parent Official: The ancient name for state and county officials.
10. Parental country: In ancient times, it was called the country where one was born. 11. Father-son soldiers: An army where the relationship between the top and bottom is as close as a family.
12. Wind, horse and ox: The wind, horse and ox are not related, which means that things have nothing to do with each other. "Zuo Zhuan: The Fourth Year of Duke Xi" records: "The king is in the North Sea, and I am in the South Sea, but the wind, horse and cow are incompatible with each other."
13. Huangliang Dream: "Zhongzhong" by Shen Jiji of the Tang Dynasty It is recorded in "The Dream" that Lu Sheng enjoyed all the wealth and glory in his dream. When he woke up, the yellow rice cooked by his master was not yet mature, so it was called the Yellow Rice Dream. It is a metaphor for unreal things and the destruction of desires, like a dream.
14. Tightening Curse: In "Journey to the West", Guanyin Bodhisattva taught Tang Monk a spell to subdue Sun Wukong, which was later used as a metaphor for a frame that binds people. 15. Nine ileum: Describes the extreme depression and pain in the chest.
Sima Qian wrote in "A Letter to Ren Shaoqing": "The intestines return nine times a day, and they suddenly seem to have forgotten something." 16. Mantra: originally refers to those who do not understand Buddhism and Zen theory, but only Can use Zen formulas as conversation materials.
The latter generally refers to words that are often talked about without actual meaning. 17. Ask questions about everything: Do more research when encountering problems.
Tao Xingzhi's poem "Ask Every Thing" says: "Manpower is better than God's work, only asking about everything." 18. Meng Gourd: A riddle that is difficult to guess, something that is unclear.
19. Layman: refers to a layman who has not yet learned a certain knowledge or skill. 20. Mianli needle: a metaphor for being kind on the outside but vicious on the inside.
It is also a metaphor for careful protection. 21. Ecstasy soup: Superstitious people refer to the soup in hell that makes the soul lose its true nature.
A metaphor for words or actions that confuse people. 22. Ecstasy: a metaphor for traps and strategies that confuse and fool people.
23. Mo Xuyou: means "maybe". It was later alleged that the charges were fabricated out of thin air.
24. Hindsight: a metaphor for taking measures after the fact. 25. Pawn: In the old days, it refers to a person who runs in front of a chariot and a horse. Later, it is often used as a metaphor for a person who works for others.
26. Birds and beasts disperse: The crowd disperses like birds and beasts. 27. Oxen and horses gallop: The original meaning refers to people who run like oxen and horses in front of the emperor.
Often used as a self-proclaimed modesty word. 28. Unprecedented: refers to something that has never happened before.
29. Knock on the side: means to help from the side. 30. Knocking bricks: Pick bricks and knock on the door. Once the door opens, throw away the bricks.
It is a metaphor for a tool for gaining fame, which can be thrown away once you get it. 31. Extortion: Using pretexts to defraud or threaten to obtain property.
32. Clear the monarch’s side: eliminate the cronies and bad guys around the monarch. 33. Wrap your fingers softly: the original meaning refers to a hero who has lost his ambition and is left to be looked down upon by others.
Later it was also used to describe softness. 34. Kill the scenery: damage the beautiful scenery.
It is a metaphor for spoiling one’s mood. Su Dongpo's poem of the Song Dynasty, "Ci Yun Lin Zi Zhong Chun Xin Dike Shi Jie Shi" says: "To report the new year, kill the scenery, even the river dream and rain do not know the spring."
35. Lion's Roar: Buddhists compare the Buddha's sermons to thunder shaking the heaven and earth. . 36. Friends who forget their age: refers to friends who forget their age.
That is, friends made regardless of age and seniority differences. 37. Bottomless pit: a metaphor for desires that can never be satisfied.
38. Take it for granted: According to speculation, this should be the case. Nowadays, most people think so based on subjective imagination, which is not consistent with the facts.
39. Quickly: describes running very fast. 40. A nest of wind: describes many people talking or acting at the same time in a noisy manner.
41. Yiyantang: It turned out to be a plaque hung in an old shop, indicating that sales and purchases are fair and equal. It was later used to reflect the undemocratic leadership style, where one person has the final say.
42. A thorn in the side: a metaphor for a person who is extremely disgusted and hateful. 43. Yes-man: A yes-man.
It is a metaphor for a person who has no independent opinions and just goes along with others. 44. Holding the cow's ears: In ancient times, princes made alliances based on their blood. They cut the cow's ears to collect the blood, and put the cow's ears on a bead plate. The person who led the alliance held the plate, so the leader of the alliance was called "holding the cow's ears".
It generally refers to taking a leadership position in a certain aspect. 45. Straight as a string: as upright as a bowstring.
"Book of the Later Han Dynasty·Five Elements Chronicles" records a nursery rhyme: "Straight as a string, on the edge of the road of death. Curved as a hook, instead of becoming a prince."
Complete collection of five-character idioms: One mind, two ends, gone forever, one hundred and twenty lines, one word, long snake array, one word, copy one hundred kinds, one wash, three catches, one lift of the hand, one retreat, six, two, five, one stick, one mark, one stick, one boat, ten Eighteen thousand miles, nine years, ten years, ten fingers, no eight characters, no strokes, no pen. If there is a god, three years, no peek into the garden, long drought, sweet rain, thousands of miles. The habit of sending goose feathers has become a natural woman. The eighteenth-year-old woman becomes a woman. There is nothing difficult for the emperor. It is jokingly said that the number one emperor in the world, the sky-high emperor, is far away and does not eat fireworks. He cannot even say a word of praise. He does not fight and does not know each other. It has been a long time and we have seen people's hearts. Chang'an is far away. There is no ice on the fire. Water and fire are incompatible. The bottom is waterlogged. The moon is unreachable. There is nothing in the world that can be desired. Difficult things will happen naturally until the ground is leveled, a sound of thunder is heard, and ten days' meal is fired by the east wind. People from the east, west, north, and south are incompatible with each other. People from the north, east, and west, and thieves are incompatible with each other. Many people do not blame etiquette. They despise friendship. The old wine is bottled. New wine is used. Food is the source of the people. People in the bag. Time does not wait for anyone to start first. The strong wave behind pushes the wave forward to move forward. The champion is angry like water and fire. He thinks he has gained a plan. The fun is short and the night is getting higher. Flowers are red for a hundred days. Lotuses are born step by step. The current situation creates a hero. Private hatred is not as good as the public Lushan. The front face is cut with a sharp knife. The harsh government is fierce and the tiger version. Version 64: Fullness and warmth give rise to lust, and the gourds are drawn in the same way. Poor and humble, unable to move things that are uneven, they sound vaguely like noble dogs bite Lu Dongbin. The blind man rides on a blind horse and talks in vain. The horse falls in love with the bean tree. Wood can't make a forest, hate iron can't make steel, peaches and plums are all over the world, catching generals and going to do bad things, looking at three and four, not looking around, not looking forward, not looking behind. The earthworm shakes the big tree, reads thousands of books, is sick, rushes to the doctor, the wind sweeps away the fallen leaves, the wind knows the power, the family ugliness, but the family letter is enough. Thousands of gold eyes are out of sight, for purity, a macaque rides a native bull to sacrifice to the gods, like a god, there is no problem in the elephant, the deer dies without choosing the sound, only reading is high, worrying for the ancients, the hozen enters the cloth bag, and the wealth cannot be lascivious. Suspicion breeds secrets, ghosts, and generosity of others. The leaks of Wengwo are in the cauldron, and the dogs cannot enter the fences and overturn the nests without leaving any eggs. 2. Are all idioms four-character sentences?
Not all idioms are four-character sentences, but the vast majority are four-character sentences. There are several reasons: First, the influence of "The Book of Songs", which opened four-character poems It was the first of its kind and had a huge influence on later generations of poetry in terms of sentence structure, rhythm, vocabulary, etc. Many idioms now come from the Book of Songs; secondly, other ancient literary works and papers, etc., the important sentence structure is the four-character sentence, and many Famous sentences that are rich in philosophy become idioms when they are often used; third, four-character sentences are sonorous, catchy, and general, so people like to use them, reuse them, and pass them on to become idioms.
Because since ancient times, four-character idioms generally do not have a number of characters, and five-character or more idioms are often labeled as "multi-character idioms". So four-character idioms account for the majority. I wonder if the poster can understand it. My oral expression is not very good!
There are about 4,000 commonly used Chinese idioms, of which 96% are four-character idioms, and the rest are two- to 14-character idioms.
Generally, idioms have origins and allusions. , idioms are mainly based on format, usually four-character pattern, with only a small number of other forms. Other forms include "three-character pattern", "five-character pattern", etc. Their expressions are mainly regional. There are many idioms that are only used in Pingyao. use!
"Four-character pattern" is a common form of Chinese idioms and one of the favorite forms of Chinese speakers. Mr. Lu Shuxiang once pointed out: The four syllables seem to have always been the Chinese "Hundred Family Surnames", "Li Shi Mengqiu", "Longwen Whip Shadow", etc. are all four syllables. Pavilions and pavilions often have four-syllable banners, which are the most popular. The idiom of "Guang" also has more than four words. ” 3. It’s not a four-character idiom
Can’t have one, can’t have two. Can’t have one without, and can’t have the second. It means unique.
Can’t have one, It cannot be used to describe unique or unique.
It is better to do more than to do less.
It is better to do less than to do more. The better. Same as "One thing is worse than one thing less."
It can only be done once but not again. Each generation is worse than the next.
It is better not to do anything that is uncertain or useless than to move.
Once something happens out of control, it is better not to do anything. It's out of control.
When one plan fails, another plan is created: a strategy or strategy means that after one method or strategy fails, another method or strategy is used.
One guest does not bother two hosts. One guest does not need to bother two hosts. It means that one person is responsible for one thing and does not need help from others.
One guest does not bother two hosts. It is a metaphor that one person is responsible for one thing, and there is no need to bother the second person.
One guest does not need to bother two families to take care of one thing. Others help.
One mouth cannot hold two spoons: a spoon. It is a metaphor for greed.
One mouth cannot hold two spoons: a spoon.
One mouth needs to eat food from two spoons at the same time. Metaphor of being greedy for too much
A horse without a saddle and two saddles: use "鴴" to put the saddle, bridle, etc. on the horse. A horse does not have two bridles, only one. It is a metaphor that if a woman does not marry two husbands, she will stay with one husband forever.
One horse without saddle and two saddle saddles: Put the saddle and bridle on the horse. A horse does not have two bridles, only one. It is a metaphor that if a woman does not marry two husbands, she will stay with one husband forever.
One horse without saddle and two saddle saddles: put the saddle and bridle on the horse. A horse does not have two bridles, only one. It is a metaphor that if a woman does not marry two husbands, she will stay with one husband forever.
A horse cannot ride on two saddles without riding two saddles. It is a metaphor for a woman not marrying two husbands.
A horse does not ride on two saddles. A horse does not wear two bridles, but only one. It is a metaphor that if a woman does not marry two husbands, she will stay with one husband forever.
A bottle does not make any noise. When the bottle is half filled with water, the bottle does not make any sound. When the bottle is half filled with water, it makes a sound. It is a metaphor that a rich person is humble and reticent, while a shallow person prefers to show off and boast about himself.
Once gone, there will be no coming back.
Once gone, never to return: again; also: to come back. Once you go, you never come back. It means that things have become the past and can never happen again.
One roost does not mean two male roosts: a resting place for birds. Two roosters cannot be perched on one stand. It is a metaphor for the confrontation between two powerful forces.
Not a penny is wasted, which is a metaphor for not wasting any money.
One person cannot defeat the wise enemy of many: arrive. The wisdom of one person is not as good as the wisdom of the collective.
Not seeing each other for one day is like not seeing each other for one day after three autumns, and it feels like three years have passed. It describes the feeling of longing very urgently.
One person is in a corner, and one person is unhappy in a corner: a corner. A person creatively sheds tears in the corner of the room, and everyone in the room is unhappy. Describes how one person's displeasure affects the entire atmosphere at a public gathering.
A mountain without two tigers is a metaphor for two people who are incompatible.
A single tree cannot form a forest without a thread. A single thread cannot form a thread, and a single tree cannot form a forest. It is a metaphor that a person's strength is weak and he cannot accomplish anything.
One thing cannot be made, two things can be seen: through "appearance". The transaction failed, but the goods and money were still there, both intact.
One solution is not as good as one solution: pass "crab". It is a metaphor that one crab is not as good as another, and it is getting worse and worse.
One crab is not as good as one crab, and it is a metaphor that one is not as good as one, and it is getting worse and worse.
One pit but two dragons is a metaphor for two heroes who cannot stand side by side.
One careless move and the whole game is lost. It originally means that if a key move is not made properly during chess, the whole game will be lost. It is a metaphor for improper handling of a certain issue that is of decisive significance to the overall situation, resulting in the entire failure.
Knowing one aspect of things, but not knowing the other. Knowing one aspect of things, but not knowing that there is another aspect. Describes an incomplete understanding of things.
Knowing one but not knowing two. Knowing what one is, but not knowing what two is. Describes an insufficient understanding of things.
Only know one aspect of things, but not the other.
Comparable. The polydactyly situation and natural appearance have undergone tremendous changes.
Rows and rows of combs: combs are the general term for combs. Arranged in order like fish scales and comb teeth. It is often used to describe houses or boats arranged densely and neatly.
Unparalleled: analogy, rival. It means that something is so perfect that nothing can compare with it.
Zhou Bubi Zhou: affinity, blending; Bi: collusion. Close relationships, but not collusion. It means being in harmony with others but not doing bad things.
Sentence-to-word ratio Yuyan carefully scrutinizes word for word and sentence to sentence.
Row upon row is often used to describe houses or boats arranged in a dense and orderly manner. Same as "row after row".
Unparalleled means that something is so perfect that nothing can compare with it. Same as "unparalleled".
Unparalleled There is no comparison.
Nothing can compare to it. It is incomparable and incomparable.
Huge means huge. Same as "big and without friends".
Fishing geese together is a metaphor for moving forward continuously, just like schools of fish joining each other and geese marching in formation.
Branch to leaf ratio The branches and leaves are relatively side by side. Metaphorical parallelism sentence pattern.
Like this than many things similar to this. 5. It is not an idiom with four characters
1. A single spark can start a prairie fire
Pinyin: xīng xīng zhī huǒ, kě yǐ liáo yuán
Explanation: A small spark can burn a large field. It is a metaphor for something new that starts small but has great potential for development.
Source: "Shang Shu Pan Geng 1": "If the fire is burning in the original place, it cannot go closer." Vernacular translation: During the Ming Dynasty, Prime Minister Zhang Juzheng appointed the famous general Qi Jiguang to train troops to deal with the Japanese invaders, and Pan Jixun Control floods in the Yellow River.
When rebellions broke out in minority areas, he believed that they were caused by corrupt officials and scoundrels. The power of the rebel army was like a spark that could start a prairie fire. He ordered the punishment of corrupt officials and powerful generals, and quickly quelled the rebellion.
Examples: Don’t underestimate me anymore. A single spark can start a prairie fire, but I don’t know how it will end!
2. When the moon is full, it wanes, and when the water is full, it overflows
Pinyin: yuè mǎn zé kuī, shuǐ mǎn zé ì
Explanation: When the moon is full, it is full. Lunar eclipses are prone to occur, and water will overflow when it is full. It is a metaphor that things will decline when they reach their peak.
Source: "Book of Changes·Feng": "When the sun is at noon, it will be waning, and when the moon is waxing, it will be eclipsed." Vernacular translation: The sun will move westward at noon, and a lunar eclipse will easily occur when the moon is full.
Sentence examples: As the saying goes, "When the moon is full, it will lose; when the water is full, it will overflow." Another saying goes, "If you climb high, you will fall heavy."
3. In the same light as the sun and the moon
Pinyin: yǔ rì yuè qí guāng
Explanation: It is equivalent to the light of the sun and the moon. It is often used to praise people's spirit and great achievements.
Source: "Chu Ci·Shejiang": "As long as the heaven and earth, as long as the sun and the moon." Vernacular translation: As long as the heaven and earth, as bright as the sun and the moon.
4. One hundred stars are not as bright as one month
Pinyin: bǎi xīng bù rú yī yuè
Explanation: The light emitted by one hundred stars is not as bright as that emitted by one moon The light is bright. It is a metaphor that quantity is not as good as quality.
Source: "Huainanzi·Shuo Lin Xun": "The brightness of a hundred stars is not as bright as the light of a month; the brightness of a house ten wide is not as bright." Vernacular translation: The light emitted by a hundred stars is not as bright as the light of one month. The light is not as bright as the light from one moon, and ten windows are not as bright as one opening.
5. Not seeing the moon for three years
Pinyin: sān nián bù mù yuè
Explanation: Having not seen the sun and moon for three years, the spirit is low and the eyes are hazy. It is a metaphor for being lazy in self-cultivation and not striving for progress.
Source: Han Dynasty Yangxiong's "Dharma Statement·Cultivation of the Self": "The sun has light and the moon has brightness. If you don't look at the sun for three years, you will be blind; if you don't look at the moon for three years, you will be blind." Vernacular Translation: When the sun has light, the moon will also illuminate. If I haven’t seen the sun and moon for three years, my energy will be low and my eyes will be dim.