Idiom pinyin: xρ xρng HuǒLiáo Yuán n.
Idiom explanation: spark: slight fire; Liao: burn; Original: vilen. A single spark can start a prairie fire. Metaphorically, small troubles can lead to great disasters. It is also a metaphor for the rapid development and broad prospects of small new things.
The origin of the idiom: "sue me, and you will be afraid of sinking into the public." ? If the fire burns in the original place, it cannot be put out. Then it's up to you to make peace, not to blame you. "("Shang Shu Pan Geng Shang ") Later generations refined the idiom" A single spark can start a prairie fire ".
Usage of Idiom: This idiom can be used as subject, predicate and attribute in a sentence, which has positive significance.
Example of Idiom: You Xi's Essays on Shu Hua He: "Everything in the world starts from the micro and ends with caution. A little carelessness, a single spark can start a prairie fire. "
A single spark can start a prairie fire.
A single spark can start a prairie fire because it is a symbol of new things. Although new things are weak at first, they have strong vitality and unlimited future, and they are invincible in the end, so a single spark can start a prairie fire. This idiom reveals the great vitality of new things.
With the passage of time, a single spark can start a prairie fire, which has gradually divorced from its own significance and turned into a vigorous state before the arrival of hope and situation. 1930 The theory that "a single spark can start a prairie fire" has pointed out the direction for China's revolutionary cause and injected vitality.