Gui Youguang's "Ling Xuan Zhi": "Full of books, singing loudly, sitting silently, everything sounds." The fifth volume of Chinese in senior high school, edition 1984 and edition 1987, is not marked with the word "borrow". It seems that "borrowing" now is "borrowing". Actually, it is not. Gui Youguang, does that make sense? In ancient times, "borrowing" belonged to Tuyuhun Jing Niu and "borrowing" belonged to Tuyuhun Cong Niu, so "borrowing" can be used to mean "borrowing books full of shelves", and literal translation means "books full of shelves".
Seeking righteousness according to the text: Seeking righteousness according to the text is an exegetical method.
For example:
1, the year is fierce, and there are many thieves in the surrounding counties. The evil should be interpreted as "crop failure" and "poor harvest" in the above sentence. It can be inferred from the previous word "year" (year, year and income).
2. The railway then fled to the city. Throw should be interpreted as "abandon" and "abandon" in the previous sentence, which can be inferred from the word "escape" in the back.
In all directions, the emperor called it: "This son should also achieve something." Is this "cunning" or "smart" in the previous sentence? From the former word "scale" and the latter word "success", it can be inferred immediately.
Seeking meaning by form: it is an exegetical method to explore and explain the original meaning of Chinese characters by analyzing their physical structure.
Historical Records of Xiang Yu: "Pei Gong's army dominates the army." Notes on the second volume of Chinese in senior high school: "army, garrison, verb." Said: "Army, encirclement, 4,000 people for the army. From cars, from provinces, from cars, from chariots. " Ancient people used cars to fight, but surrounded themselves. This shows that the "garrison" of the "rebel army". Who is the chariot in the circle? The army, of course, so "army" means "army". Therefore, the meanings of "garrison" and "army" both come from the original meaning of "encirclement". Since "army" is a verb, it is certainly not a verb when "army" means "garrison".