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There are idioms about women and children?
A. What are the complete dictionaries of Confucian idioms?

Confucian idioms:

A willing son can teach,

Women and children know that,

Confucian thought of desire,

Women are obedient,

Old, weak, women and children,

Young people who are wet behind the ears

B. Idioms in which women know words

Even women and children know.

Ferugizi

[Interpretation]

Confucianism: children. Women and children know that. Describe a simple thing that everyone knows or knows at a glance.

[Pronunciation]

All; It can't be pronounced "Jie".

[shape discrimination]

Hey; Can't write Confucianism.

[near meaning]

Well known

as everyone knows

[antonym]

Little known

[usage]

Used to describe simple things that everyone knows or understands at a glance; Sometimes it is also used for people. Generally used as predicate, attribute and complement.

[structure]

Subject-predicate type

[Discrimination]

~ and "well known"; Everybody knows that. But "well-known" applies to obvious facts or reasons; It also applies to people; The scope of application is wider than "as we all know".

[example]

Publicity of marriage law; Become a household name; ~。

C. Is there an idiom to marry and have children?

generally speaking

"Women will be young"

Pinyin qièfüJiāng chú

To explain, with a wife and children (version, general: with power; Chicken: A bird.

Lu Xun's "South-to-North Transfer" originated from: "When I am used to spending spring in the long night, my wife will have silk on her young sideburns."

Once there is a drought and crops fail, people in the village will go out to take shelter.

It is a custom for young women to have silk on their temples on long nights in spring.

In my dream, I vaguely shed tears for my mother, and the flag of the king on the city head changed.

Endure watching peers become new ghosts, and look for small poems in anger.

There is no place to write, and the moonlight is like water.

Used as predicate, object and attribute; Used in family

Synonymous with wife's belt

D. What are the idioms about children?

A willing son can teach.

Basic explanation

Can be cultivated.

commendatory sense

tidy

Sima Qian's Historical Records in the Western Han Dynasty: "My father was tolerant and laughed without answering. Liang Shu was frightened and looked at it with his eyes. My father went to school and came back and said,' A good boy can teach.' "

synonym

Respect teachers and teach students to appreciate snow.

antonym

You can't carve rotten wood, so you can't carve rotten wood.

E. What are the idioms with children?

What idioms are there to take care of children?

Women and children know that,

A willing son can teach,

Women are obedient,

Old, weak, women and children,

Young people who are wet behind the ears

F. What are the idioms with children?

Women and children know that,

A willing son can teach,

Women are obedient,

Old, weak, women and children,

Young people who are wet behind the ears

G. women, women, women, women, women, women, women, women, women, women, women, women, women, women, women, women, women, women, men, women, women, women, women, women, women.

The answer is known to all women and children.

translate freely

Confucianism: children. Women and children know that. Describe a simple thing that all experts know or understand at a glance.

Correct sb's pronunciation

All; It can't be pronounced "Jie".

Shape discrimination

Hey; Can't write Confucianism.

use

Used to describe simple things that everyone knows or understands at a glance; Sometimes it is also used for people. Generally used as predicate, attribute and complement.

structure

Subject-predicate type

remove doubts and misgivings

~ and "well known"; Everybody knows that. But "well-known" applies to obvious facts or reasons; It also applies to people; The scope of application is wider than "as we all know".

H. Four-word idioms of married women

Women and children know that,

Bitch scolds the street,

The goodness of women,

Husband and woman sing together,

Three-day bride,

Stupid husbands and stupid women,

Get off at Fengfu,

Wine girl,

Women are obedient,

Feng Fu got off the bus,

Sick mother,

Old, weak, women and children,

Yellow silk young woman,

A good wife,

Men plow, women weave,

Pi Fu ditch,

Trafficking in husbands and women,

Bad wife,

Women's opinions,

An ordinary woman,

Husband and wife turned against each other,

Don't let other women throw chickens,

Tie the fetters and give them back to the woman,

A gossipy woman,

Fu Xi,

Do it again, Mrs. Feng,

Single husband and only woman,

That adulterer,

Orphans and widows,

civilian

Yao Tao bride,

Dismount Feng Fu,

Life forced him to sell his wife and children to others.

Women will be young: leadership; Young: A young child. With his wife and children.

Stupid husband and wife:

Returning a woman to her husband: a metaphor for asking for help. It is also a metaphor for solving problems for others. With "fire".

Three-day bride: A bride who went through the door for three days in the old society should never behave improperly. It is a metaphor for people with limited mobility.

Men, women and children:

Fu Bogu Xi:

Do Mrs. Feng again; Do it again; Do it again; Feng Fu: First name. Metaphor to do the old industry again.

Being Feng Fu again means that people have returned to their original jobs.

Silly husband and silly woman: The old society was called ordinary people.

Stupid woman: an ignorant person. It used to refer to ordinary people.

Dismount Phoenix House: It is a metaphor for people who return to their old jobs.

Sick mother: refers to the excuse that the mother is ill, because she misses her wife and wants to go back to her hometown. Metaphor is faking.

Ordinary women: ordinary men and women. Generally refers to civilians.

Bitch scolds the street: bitch: a fierce and fierce woman. Abuse in public in the street like a bitch. More refers to wanton attacks and abuse of others.

Pi Fu ditch: refers to the place where ordinary women are detained.

Selling children to women: refers to selling his wife and children to others because of the pressure of life.

A good son and wife.

Teaching women is new, teaching babies: it means educating a person at the right time and early.

Young women with yellow rolls: the argot of the word "wonderful"

Yellow silk bride: the argot of "Miao"

Orphans and widows: children who have lost their fathers and women who have lost their husbands. Generally refers to people who have lost their loved ones and are helpless.

Fu Bogu Xi: Fu Gu: daughter-in-law and mother-in-law; Percy: Family quarrel. At first, it refers to the quarrel between mother-in-law and daughter-in-law. Later, it is also a metaphor of internal struggle.

Traffickers: formerly known as peddlers.

A woman's benevolence: kindness. Women are soft-hearted. Old refers to tolerance, indecision and ignorance of the overall situation.

Husband advocates female obedience: in feudal society, the wife must obey her husband, and later it means that husband and wife live in harmony. With "the husband sings with the woman."

Female wine: refers to indulging in debauchery.

Women: Women and children.

Female morality: female morality: the moral norms that women should abide by. An adult woman

Gossip girl: It is often used to refer to a woman who is talkative and likes gossip and gossip.

Alcoholic woman: alcoholic liquor: strong liquor. Metaphor is a decadent life.

1. What are the idioms that contain the word "fu"?

Husband sings with women, women are benevolent, women and children all know the source, stupid husband and stupid woman, old and weak women and children, yellow silk young married woman.

J. What idioms can be formed by knowing Japanese women and children?

Even women and children know.

Ferugizi

Confucianism: children. Women and children know that. As we all know.

"A single spark can start a prairie fire and revive Xiangxi": "But when it comes to his (He Long) name, almost all women and children in Hunan and Hubei know it."

Chrysanthemum after the Double Ninth Festival-stale and no longer interesting.

In ancient times, there was a custom of enjoying chrysanthemums on the Double Ninth Festival. After the Double Ninth Festival, people have no interest in watching them (yellow flowers: chrysanthemums). Metaphor is something that is out of date or has lost its practical meaning.

Prompt not to write "Yesterday's Yellow Flower".

Idiom explanation

Yellow flower: chrysanthemum. Originally refers to the chrysanthemum that gradually withered after the Double Ninth Festival. The latter refers to outdated things or news.

The source of Su Song's poem "The Prince's Nine Days and Two Rhymes": "You don't have to return when you meet, and Huang Die will be sad tomorrow."

Ex.: outdated things, yue ~. ◎ Song Hu Jizong's Story Flowers and Trees

Grammar is formal; Become an object; With a derogatory meaning, the metaphor is dying.

words explanation

[outdated; Things in the past are procrastinating and no longer interested] refers to the chrysanthemum of the Double Ninth Festival, which means that once things change, you will feel sorry in vain.

Exodus: There is no need to hurry back when we meet, and Huang Die will be sad tomorrow. -Su Shi's Nine Days and the Maharaja

I don't know if bees are worried about butterflies, but Xiao Ting is still winding the branches. Now that people are different, autumn frost declines overnight. -Tang Zhenggu's Ten-Day Chrysanthemum

Citation interpretation

Song Sushi's "The Nine Days of the Princes": "You don't have to return when you meet, and Huang Die will be worried tomorrow."

There is also the word "Nanxiangzi Chongjiu Hanhui Building is Xu Junyou", which says: "Everything is a dream in the end. If you take a break, you will be sad tomorrow."

Tomorrow, after the Double Ninth Festival; Yellow flowers and chrysanthemums. The ancients appreciated chrysanthemums more than the Double Ninth Festival, and tomorrow's yellow flowers also meant old age. Later, because of the metaphor of outdated things.

Guo Moruo's Preface to Boiling Soup: "Here are a few articles, enough is enough, and it is inevitable that there will be a sense of the past."

Bing Xin's "Send a Little Scholar" Erqi: "In four full moons, I can be in my mother's arms again, and even children don't have to patiently look at my calligraphy, which was a yellow flower a month ago!"