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What are the skills of four-character idioms?
What are the idioms of 1 4? Four-character idioms (idiom classification)

Idioms with animal names

Vientiane renewal, scurrying about, cock crow stealing, hammering, mending after the sheep dies, casting pearls on cows, playing the lute on cows, being like a duck to water, singing birds and flowers, being evil to tigers and friends, being at the end of the road, making the finishing point, crouching like a tiger, waiting for rabbits, being young, jumping over the wall, touching the elephant by the blind, and painting the snake to add feet contain two elements.

Stand out from the crowd, crows and thieves, snipes and mussels compete, swallow whales, clues, and enter the dragon, while dragons and phoenixes dance, dragons and tigers leap, dragons and tigers step, dragons and tigers cave, Feng Ming, Yue Long, traffic, rabbits die of grief, making dogs bark restlessly and devour them.

Idioms containing human organs

He was arrogant, dumbfounded, with no ink on his chest, top-heavy, brotherly, duplicitous, broke his head, with fine eyes, stood by and was rude.

I don't have the strength to tie up a chicken-I'm very weak

Idioms with insect names

Moths put out the fire, cicadas shed their shells, mosquitoes accumulate into thunder, the moon wins the laurel, eats whales, dragonflies water, clues, mantis catches cicadas, and yellowbird is behind.

Idioms containing a set of synonyms

Well-informed, well-informed, far-sighted, glance left and right, dispatch troops, smash, storm, beat about the bush, go through hardships, catch the eye quickly, full of vitality, earth-shattering, patchwork, nonsense, regime change, hearsay.

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Idioms with a set of antonyms

Shout back and forth, hold the East tightly, stagger your eyes and keep silent. Making a fool of yourself is very important. It's a diversion from south to west, turning the corner and turning around. Look around, every little makes a mickle. * * Well-meaning, overqualified, overqualified, make a fool of yourself is also natural. Making a fool of yourself is very important.

Multi-word idioms

A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step, and it is easy for a thousand troops to look at each other. One is hard to find, the right time and the right place are harmonious, and habit becomes nature. In a word, the plan for a year lies in the long drought in spring, and the one who tied the bell is needed to solve the problem. People who have no long-term worries will be as quiet as a virgin, as moving as a rabbit, and cramming for the Buddha's sparrow.

Idioms describing emergencies

It's urgent to do something urgent, and we can't wait for a hundred fires to burn our eyebrows.

I feel relaxed and calm, and I am in a daze, smiling and frowning.

Frowning, dumbfounded, depressed, smirking

Idioms describing heroes

Righteousness, aboveboard, wisdom and courage, turn the tide.

Use your quick wits to help you reach your expectations. Calm down and save the day.

Idioms describing the beauty of spring

Spring is bright and colorful, and spring rain is like oil. Birds are singing and flowers are fragrant in spring.

2. The answer to the four-word idiom "What is a chicken?" Pinyin: rén cái jǐ jǐ explains a lot of things. It describes many talented people. Definition of talent: refers to a person with both ability and political integrity or a certain specialty. It describes many talented people. There are many things. 2 Idioms and allusions Source: Shu Da Mo Yu: "There are many people." Can't be pronounced "j". Can't write "self". Synonyms: talented people come forth in large numbers; Antonym: talent scattered; Grammar: subject-predicate type; As subject, object and attribute; With a compliment [Usage] Used as a compliment. Generally used as subject, object and attribute. [Structure] Subject-predicate type. [analysis] see "talented people come forth in large numbers" ['example] There are a large number of doctoral and master's students in the Academy of Sciences; Is the main researcher of various disciplines; It can be said that there are many talents. [Discrimination] Miswritten as "talent crowding" [1].

3. Why are there so many four-character idioms? Idiom is a special fixed phrases used in daily life, which has complete meaning and solidified structure. Judging from the number of words, most idioms have four words, but there are also three words such as "unnecessary" and "Reservoir Dogs", five words such as "nothing is difficult in the world" and six words. For example, there are eight words, such as "violence against violence" and "what can be tolerated? What can't be tolerated? " There are also nine words, ten words or even a dozen words. If used properly, it can make the language concise and enhance the rhetorical effect. To use idioms accurately, we must understand and grasp them correctly. There are also some four sentences in the ancient history books. Later, beginners read three, a hundred, and a thousand articles, and the last two were four sentences. The first, second and third episodes of four-character miscellaneous words and Long Wen Whip Shadow are all four words. Although this is a manual, it is enough to explain four sentences. Especially there are even fewer idioms with less than four words. Therefore, when the Japanese speak Chinese, there is a saying of "four-character Chinese" (see Modern Chinese in Middle School edited by Yoshida Sheng, 1978 edition), and some of them are also called "four-character idioms" (see Chinese in Middle School edited by Quan Zhongzhi, 1978 edition). However, they are included in "four-character Chinese" because we don't have such expressions as "from left to right", "instructions from above", "hesitation in execution" and "questioning response". For example, they also regard "spring, summer, autumn and winter", "left and right" and "east, west, north and south" as "four-character idioms", but we don't agree with them. "Spring, summer, autumn and winter" is a meteorological term, and "around" is a common orientation term in daily life. There is no denying that there are four words in the idiom. For example, the following idioms are not four words from the source. In other words, these idioms are all four-character idioms refined from non-four-character words. Look at the relationship between the following idioms and their origins: (1) See through autumn, "A discerning person sees the end of autumn, but he doesn't get paid." ("Mencius" is not as good as seeking fish from wood. (Mencius Liang Wang Hui) (3) Get twice the result with half the effort. "Nowadays, Wan Cheng's country is benevolent, and the people enjoy it and solve the problem better. People with semi-ancient stories will get twice the result with half the effort, but only once. "("Mencius Gongsun Chou "Volume 4) Carve a boat for help. (Shi Lv Chun Qiu Cha Jin) ⑤ Liu Zongyuan wrote an article on Three Commandments in the Tang Dynasty, one of which was Donkey of Money. The Donkey of Money is an excerpt from the story described in this article. (6) My broom is precious (or "My broom is precious") "There is a broom at home. "The four characters of idioms are very obvious. Either reduce the words with more than four words to four words, such as "seeing through the autumn" and "seeking fish from the edge of the tree", or combine two sentences into one sentence with only four words, such as "getting twice the result with half the effort" and "our daughter". Or a story with more words, written in four words, becomes an idiom, such as "carving a boat for a sword" It was very troublesome, so I had to give up and use it as a guide. For example, "The Story of Yueyang Tower by Fan Zhongyan in the Song Dynasty" has a good meaning, but it is impossible to form an idiom because there are too many words. We can only regard it as an epigram and sometimes introduce articles. For example, it's easier said than done. Because it is a four-character poem, it has become an idiom. Supplement: Idioms are not all four-character cases, but most of them are four-character cases. There are several reasons: First, the influence of The Book of Songs, the first four-character poem, has a great influence on later poems in terms of sentence pattern, rhythm and vocabulary, and now many idioms come from The Book of Songs; Second, other ancient literary works and papers, whose important structure is four sentences, many famous philosophical sentences are often used and become idioms; Third, the four-character phrase is powerful, catchy and strong in generalization, so people like to use it, and it will become an idiom if used repeatedly. Since ancient times, four-character idioms are generally not labeled, and more than five characters are often labeled as "multi-character idioms". Therefore, four-character idioms account for the majority, and there are about 4,000 commonly used Chinese idioms, of which four-character idioms account for 96%, and the rest are 14. Idioms are mainly in format, generally in four-character format, with only a few other formats, such as "three-character format" and "five-character format". Their expressions are mainly regional, and many idioms are unique in Pingyao! " "Four-character case" is a common form of Chinese idioms and one of the favorite forms of Chinese users. Mr. Lv Shuxiang once pointed out that four syllables in Chinese always seem to be four tones, such as Baijia surname, Li and Longwen Whip Shadow. There is always a four-word banner in the pavilion, and the most popular idiom is also four words.

4. What are the four-character idioms at the beginning of science and technology? What are the four-character idioms at the beginning of science and technology?

Technical and economic success,

More skillful

Better than others.

dictionary definition

[Idiom explanation]

Skill: Skill. Of skills higher than others.

[source of allusions]

Jin Yuzhou's "Zhao Kuangyin" Chapter 2 1: "It's really a bit' able' to defend the mountain and win the battle."

[Synonym]

Artistic Excellence

[Examples of idioms]

Chapter 2 of Wu Beijing Office: "I heard that you are better than others."

[general degree]

frequently-used

[Feeling * * * color]

commendatory term

[Grammatical usage]

As predicate and attribute; Mostly used in spoken English

[Idiom structure]

Partial form

[Generation year]

Modern Times