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What idioms are there with new words?

1, standard innovation and innovation

Idiom pinyin: biāo xěn Chuàng y?

Interpretation of idioms: Mark: Uncover, uncover; Alien: Special. Come up with new ideas to show that you are different.

Idiom origin: Qing Li Yu's "Leisure House": "The success of building a garden pavilion cannot be seen by yourself, and it seems that there are innovators."

2, half new and not old

Idiom pinyin: bàn xρn bρJiρ

Idiom definition: half: half. It means neither new nor old.

The origin of the idiom: The third time in Zhou Sheng's Biography of Awakening Marriage in the Western Qing Dynasty: "I saw an old man with a white beard in his seventies and eighties, wearing a ivory velvet towel and a brown robe that was neither old nor new."

3. Avoid vulgarity and seek novelty.

Idiom pinyin: běsúqěxěn

Idiom definition: bogey: give up; Trend: a trend. Refers to abandoning old customs and pursuing new trends.

The origin of the idiom: Ye Shengtao's "Gathering Bitterness": "What is the significance of' Happy New Year'? It is nothing more than a vulgar custom of advocating empty talk. Therefore, the phase rate is not a' New Year', that is, avoiding vulgarity and becoming new. "

4. Old hatred and new worries

Idiom pinyin: jihèn xěn chóu

Interpretation of Idioms: New Sorrow and Previously Unsolved Pain

The origin of the idiom: Song Xianglian's poem "Like a Dream, Road flyover, Shujunlou" says: "There are endless old hatreds and new worries, and there are tall buildings in the northwest, just hiding and leaning alone."

5. Accept new things and spit them out

Idiom Pinyin: nà xīn tǔ gù

Idiom explanation: breathe in fresh air, spit out the old and get new ones.

The origin of the idiom: Yuan Xinwen's Biography of Tang Caizi Yan Lu: "The bear is stretched by the bird, new and old, and there is no seven emotions to seize the soul."