Bit by bit four-character idiom
Drooling: Drooling. I am so greedy that my mouth is watering. Describe the appearance of extreme greed And described it as jealous. Drooling: Drooling. I am so greedy that my mouth is watering. Describe a very greedy look.
Drop powder and knead cakes to describe women's rich ornaments.
Not a drop of water, not a drop of water. Describe speaking and doing things very carefully, carefully and impeccably. It also describes that you have all the money and you won't sell it easily.
Water drops turned into ice. Water drops turned into ice. Describe the cold weather.
Drops of water wear through the stone, but water keeps dripping, which can wear through the stone. Metaphor as long as you have perseverance and keep working hard, things will succeed.
A trickle becomes a river: small drops of water. Little by little, water droplets can be collected into a river. Describe many a mickle makes a mickle.
Drip to the public: a small water point is a metaphor for subtle things. Describe that all property belongs to the public, not private use.
Water drops and stones keep dripping through the water, so can stones. Metaphor as long as you have perseverance and keep working hard, things will succeed.
Copper pot dripping copper pot: the leak of ancient timing. Count the time of water leakage with a copper pot.
Drops of dew grind cinnabar. Refers to proofreading books with a brush.
Dropping dew and grinding beads refers to dripping water and grinding ink.
The description of dripping water is very pure.
A drop of water into the river is a metaphor for many a mickle makes a mickle.
A drop of water is hard to disappear, that is to say, even the thinnest thing can't be used.
Trickle-down: a small drop of water, which is a metaphor for something very small or tiny. Nothing is lacking. Also known as "not a drop left" and "not a drop left".
Trickle: a trickle; Water droplets: small water droplets. Not a drop was missed. Metaphor is that tiny or very few things are not left out.
Trickle: a trickle; Water droplets: water droplets. The benefits of being as small as a drop of water.
A trickle of labor: a trickle; Water droplets: water droplets. Small contribution.
Tears welled up to describe touching sadness, tears welled up.
Nausea and blood drop are metaphors of exhaustion. It is often described as the hard work of career, work and literary creation. Use "painstaking".
Describe tiny and sporadic bit by bit.
The jade liquid is still dripping, which means that the night is not over yet. Jade leak: a leaky pot for timing.
2. A () a () four-word account,
Single-minded,
Year,
Little by little,
Exactly the same,
Echo each other,
With a limp,
Relax once,
A needle and a thread,
A way and a way,
Every move,
For a living,
Word for word,
Every grass and tree,
Sing along,
A pass,
Give and take,
Welcome and end,
A glass of wine and a kiss,
Do one thing,
A trip to Henan,
One sorrow and one joy,
A drum and a board,
A section of a line,
A turtle and a crane,
A penny,
In every word and deed,
Smile,
Chaos rules,
Conditional concurrency
The idiom recorded bit by bit is accumulated bit by bit.
Source: He Gangde's "Guest Talk" Volume 4: "There is surplus grain, buy half an acre this year and half an acre next year."
Get together: Get together and meet. The accumulation of bit by bit will change from less to more.
Source: Han Dong Nakagawa: "Many small numbers make a big number."
Trickle: a trickle; Water droplets: small water droplets. Not a drop was missed. Metaphor is that tiny or very few things are not left out.
Source: Tang Du Fu's Tired Night: "Dewdrops reappear like a trickle, and at first glance you see a few stars."
A trickle becomes a river: small drops of water. Little by little, water droplets can be collected into a river. Describe many a mickle makes a mickle.
Running water is a metaphor for saving property, so it is often used. It is also a metaphor for doing one thing bit by bit without interruption.
Source: Hao's "Popular Geography" quoted "Teaching Classics": "Diligence, such as small water, can wear away stones."
Describe tiny and sporadic bit by bit.
Source: Fang Zhimin's "Lovely China Poverty": "The money raised for the revolution is used for the revolutionary cause bit by bit."
The accumulation of Thai baht is still accumulated bit by bit. It is often described that things are not easy to finish. Same as "Thai baht accumulation".
Source: Wan's Epitaph of Zhou Wengguoke: "Weng thrives on food and clothing, and accumulates wealth to restore the past."
Cumulative baht: A very small unit of weight in ancient China. The weight of a hundred millet in Han Dynasty is one baht. Describe the accumulation of bit by bit. It also describes that things are not easy to finish.
Source: Song Zhaolinde's "Backstreet Record" Volume 4: "The silk of a cold woman is accumulated. Step by step, the clouds are thundering. "
Bit by bit, bit by bit. It is often described that things are not easy to finish. Same as "Thai baht accumulation".
Source: The History of the Song Dynasty of Yuan Dynasty 179: "At that time, Cao Si did not measure the strength of the national army, and all the cases belonged to it, which was biased, so he gathered counties and counties and accumulated bamboo, especially in Jiangdong and West."
The accumulation of Thai baht is still accumulated bit by bit. It is often described that things are not easy to finish. Same as "Thai baht accumulation".
Source: Yun Yuewei Caotang Notes, I heard Ruruo IV: "Old Confucians are good at living ... when they accumulate, they will get forty gold coins."
You get what you pay for, in every word and deed. It is often described that things are not easy to finish.
Source: Zhu Ziyu: "When Yang was 14 or 15 years old, he thought it was a good substrate and he was in love. I dare not be embarrassed, in fact, it is accumulated. "
4. The four-word idiom with Didi is green: dark green.
Describe green plants, such as vegetation, as if they were full of water. Drooling: Drooling.
I am so greedy that my mouth is watering. Describe the appearance of extreme greed
And described it as jealous. Drooling: Drooling.
I am so greedy that my mouth is watering. Describe a very greedy look.
Drop powder and knead cakes to describe women's rich ornaments. Not a drop of water, not a drop of water.
Describe speaking and doing things very carefully, carefully and impeccably. It also describes that you have all the money and you won't sell it easily.
Water drops turned into ice. Water drops turned into ice. Describe the cold weather.
Drops of water wear through the stone, but water keeps dripping, which can wear through the stone. Metaphor as long as you have perseverance and keep working hard, things will succeed.
A trickle becomes a river: small drops of water. Little by little, water droplets can be collected into a river.
Describe many a mickle makes a mickle. Drip to the public: a small water point is a metaphor for subtle things.
Describe that all property belongs to the public, not private use. Water drops and stones keep dripping through the water, so can stones.
Metaphor as long as you have perseverance and keep working hard, things will succeed. Copper pot dripping copper pot: the leak of ancient timing.
Count the time of water leakage with a copper pot. Drops of dew grind cinnabar.
Refers to proofreading books with a brush. Dropping dew and grinding beads refers to dripping water and grinding ink.
The description of dripping water is very pure. A drop of water into the river is a metaphor for many a mickle makes a mickle.
A drop of water is hard to disappear, that is to say, even the thinnest thing can't be used. Trickle-down: a small drop of water, a metaphor for something very small or few.
Nothing is lacking. Also known as "not a drop left" and "not a drop left".
Trickle: a trickle; Water droplets: small water droplets. Not a drop was missed.
Metaphor is that tiny or very few things are not left out. Trickle: a trickle; Water droplets: water droplets.
The benefits of being as small as a drop of water. A trickle of labor: a trickle; Water droplets: water droplets.
Small contribution. Tears welled up to describe touching sadness, tears welled up.
Nausea and blood drop are metaphors of exhaustion. It is often described as the hard work of career, work and literary creation.
Use "painstaking". Describe tiny and sporadic bit by bit.
The jade liquid is still dripping, which means that the night is not over yet. Jade leak: a leaky pot for timing.
5. Four-character idioms include four-character idioms:
Drip wears away the stone,
Little by little,
Waterproof,
Drip into the river,
Infiltrate the public,
Tears are like water drops in spring,
Drop by drop,
Green is about to drop,
Exquisite,
Dripping water is hard to disappear,
Dewdrops and beads,
Drop by drop,
Drop soup,
With a little effort,
Without dripping,
Dropping powder and flour cakes,
Lush,
The copper pot drips,
Dripping water into ice,
Dripping and grinding ink,
Without leaving a drop,
Drooling,
Water droplets will wear away stones,
Trickle profit,
A trickle becomes a river,
Falling like an axle,
Nausea and blood,
Dropping water into ice,
Drooling,
The night is not over yet.
6. One-four words are single-minded, one-one, one-one, one-one, one-one, one-one, Yi Long, one pig.
Echo each other exactly the same, a smile, a fire.
Once in a while, a piano and a crane once a year.
Every grass and tree, step by step, bit by bit.
Every move, a song, a poem, a thing, a dragon and a snake.
Smile, frown, drink and peck, and be of one mind.
One mountain, one valley, one edge, one point, one word and one board.
One sorrow and one joy, one process and one virtue, and one heart and one smile.
One piece, one piece, one ladle, one song, one song, one night.
One class, one leveling, one horse, one saddle, one scale, one claw, one fumigation and one cure.
One stitch and one thread, one initiative, one class, one generation, one thought and one plan.
One ghost at a time, one foot at a time, one cigarette at a time.
One word, one bead, one road, one thought, one strength, one thought, one road.
One dark, one bright, one meter, one word, one drop of tears.
One heart, one belly, one branch, one humble abode, one cent and one dime a day.
One is long, the other is short, the other is awake, and it is passed down from generation to generation.
Set the gear overnight, and you can blow, sing and sing exactly the same.
One to one, one to one, one to one, one to one, one to one.
One limb, one joint, one needle, one bite and one gear.
Greet a board, drum a board.