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How to cut chicken with an afternoon knife?

"How to cut chicken with a lunch knife" should be "How to cut chicken with a cow knife". Yan: interrogative pronouns, how can they. Niu Dao: It is a metaphor for people or things with powerful functions and abilities. It doesn't take much effort to do small things. This idiom is generally used as a clause, predicate and attribute in sentences.

This idiom comes from a historical story, and its related allusions were first found in The Analects of Confucius Yang Huo.

The child's martial city, the sound of string songs. The master smiled and said, "Why do you want to cut the chicken with an ox knife?" Ziyou said to him, "Mr. Yan has also heard the philosophers say,' A gentleman learns to love others, but a villain learns the Tao easily.' Confucius said, "Two or three sons! Yan's words are right. Foreword, the ear of drama. " (The Analects of Confucius Yang Huo)?

"How to cut a chicken with an ox knife" later evolved into "How to kill a chicken with an ox knife".

"How to kill a chicken without a knife", it doesn't take much effort to do small things. People who make a mountain out of a molehill will make a mountain out of a molehill because of small problems. They usually treat small things inappropriately as big things, and they don't know the gist and exaggerate when dealing with things. Similarly, suspicious people are stupid.

You don't need to be casually influenced by small things around you, you don't need to complicate things, you can face people and things around you calmly and analyze things reasonably. We need to learn to allocate resources rationally and analyze problems concretely, just like our own time and energy. We should make rational use of them and learn to spend them on meaningful things, instead of blindly taking detours and wasting our youth.

Know how to analyze problems rationally and then find the best solution, so that you can achieve the desired results more smoothly.