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How does the apprentice explain?
Disciple's explanation: describe running horses. Metaphor sudden success, rapid rise in office.

"Apprentice" is a China idiom, which comes from Tang Hanyu's "Fu Shu Shu Cheng Nan". Generally used as predicate and attribute in sentences. Tang Han Yu's poem "Du Fu Shu Cheng Nan": "Thirty bones and one pig are in a dragon; If you fly to the yellow room, you can't control the toad. " Later generations refined the idiom "the apprentice".

Moral of the idiom: In the poem, Han Yu uses story metaphors to educate his son. Only by studying hard and making continuous progress can he change a person and endow him with talent, otherwise he will never achieve anything. Therefore, if you want to achieve something in the future, you must not slack off in your studies. As the saying goes, "No pains, no gains." Success is not accidental. Only after a long period of hard work can the dream come true.

Qing Changbai Haozi's "Firefly Window and Different Grass". "Weak Cui": "If you don't laugh at Khan, it won't be so. Today I have a successful career, and I am excited for Xu Wuqing. " Yuan Anonymous's "Stone Man Yi Rikas Marries a Maid": "Li Chunlang is in the ascendant, thanks to the kindness of his elders." The writer Wang Zengqi's Being Commanded. Different abilities ":"Even as far as Wang Er is concerned, he has made a fortune in recent years and has strong financial resources, and he must have his own unique abilities. "

Discrimination of idioms:

The apprentice: "the apprentice" means to rise to the sky, indicating that people's status has risen rapidly. "The apprentice" and "soaring to the sky" both refer to the rapid rise of people's status.

But there are differences in meaning: "the apprentice" can not only indicate the rise of official position and status, but also refer to success and wealth in general, with wider meaning and wider application scope; "Promotion" generally only refers to the rise of official position and status, with a narrow meaning and a small scope of application.