Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - Educational institution - What do you mean, wait for your pillow?
What do you mean, wait for your pillow?
ㄓㄣㄡㄜㄉㄞㄉㄢㄟ Athena Chu.

Pinyin zhn güdàI dàn

Shi Ge: an ancient weapon; Similar to "spear"; Dan: It's dawn. There are weapons on the pillow; Wait for the dawn. Describe eager to kill the enemy; Perseverance; Always ready to fight.

The idiom comes from the biography of Liu Kun in the Book of Jin: "I am always afraid that my ancestors will whip me."

Simplified Chinese characters are waiting for you

Common degree

Sexy in color

Idiom pillow, you can not write "Chen" or "Shen"; Stupid, can't write "history".

Similar words: sit on the armor and wait for the pillow.

On the contrary, the word "drunk and in a daze" means "sit back and relax"

Idiom story and Liu Kun, a native of the Western Jin Dynasty, is cheerful, brave and chivalrous. When I was young, I not only wrote well, but also enjoyed practicing martial arts and keeping fit, determined to serve my country. At that time, the Jin Dynasty was still in charge of the Central Plains on the surface, but in fact it was already in internal and external difficulties. When Zu Ti and Liu Kun talk about the domestic situation, they are always generous and often talk about it late at night. One day, Zu Ti and Liu Kun were very excited. Liu Kun didn't know when he fell asleep, but Zu Ti was immersed in the excitement of the conversation and couldn't sleep for a long time. "Oh, oh, oh-"The rooster crowed in the wasteland, and Zu Ti jumped up and kicked Liu Kun: "Listen, how excited the rooster crowed! Get up and practice sword! " So the two men picked up swords and danced on the high slope. Since then, when they hear the first call every morning, they must come to the wasteland to practice their swords. Liu Kun was deeply moved by Zu Ti's patriotic enthusiasm and determined to devote himself to his ancestors. In his letter to his family, he wrote: "In times of national crisis, I often' wait for death' (sleeping till dawn with my arms on my pillow), determined to serve my country, and often worried about falling behind Zu Ti and not letting him surpass me! ……"

English translation turns a person's speech into a pill, waiting for dawn.

Idiom dictionary of Ministry of Education

ㄓㄣㄡㄜㄉㄞㄉㄢㄟ Athena Chu.

Pinyin zhè n gà i à n

The idiom explains that you put your arm on the pillow and wait for dawn. Describe eager to kill the enemy and serve the country, ready to fight at any time. # Out of gold. Sun Sheng's Yang Jinqiu. Later, people used it to describe people who were absorbed and afraid to relax.

First, the semantic description describes the eagerness to kill the enemy and serve the country, ready to fight at any time. Usage categories are used in the expression "beware of war". Idiom sentence-making