Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - What stories did these idioms come from when Handan was a toddler?

What stories did these idioms come from when Handan was a toddler?

1, Handan toddler

From: Zhuangzi in the Warring States Period and Autumn Water in Zhuangzi: "Eggplant doesn't know that Yu Zi is studying in Fushouling and studying in Handan? If you can't get the power of the country, you will lose your reason and go straight to your ears. "

Commentary: Besides, haven't you heard that Yu, a long-lived man from Yan State, went to Handan, Zhao State to learn to walk? I didn't learn the walking posture of Zhao Guoren, and I forgot his original walking posture, so I finally had to climb back.

Interpretation of idioms: Handan: the capital of Zhao in the Warring States Period; Toddler: Learn to walk. It is a metaphor for imitating people who don't go home and forgetting what they once knew.

Grammar: formal; As predicate, object and clause; With a derogatory connotation.

2, just make up the number.

From: Han Fei in the Warring States Period, on Han Feizi's possession: "Qi Xuanwang needs 300 people to play the flute. Nan Guo invited him to play the piano. He was very happy to hear that hundreds of people supported him in the Zhou Dynasty. When King Xuan died, he told the King of Qi. When Chu Shi heard this, he ran away. "

Interpretation: If Qi Xuanwang is boasted, it must be boasted by 300 people. Chu Shi from the south asked for a blowjob for Qi Xuanwang, and Wang Xuan was very happy. The official warehouse supports hundreds of musicians. After his death, his son Wang succeeded to the throne. Wang also likes listening to the blowing, but he likes to let them blow one by one, so the southerners have to escape.

Interpretation of idioms: abuse: inaccurate and false. People who can't play the flute are mixed in the flute team. Metaphor means that you have to be equipped with ability if you don't have the ability, and inferior goods pretend to be good goods.

Grammar: subject-predicate type; As predicate and attribute; derogatory sense

3. Steal the bell from your ear

Said by: Not afraid of "Lu Chunqiu Self-knowledge": "If people have a clock, they must not lose it. Destroy it with vertebrae, and the bell will ring. I am afraid that people will smell it and take it away, covering their ears. "

Commentary: When Fan, the doctor of the State of Jin, died, a common people got a bell and wanted to take it away. It's just that the clock is too big to carry. So he broke it with a hammer, and the bell rang again. People are afraid that others will hear the noise and grab the clock, so they quickly block their ears and think that they can't hear it, so others can't hear it.

Idiom interpretation: cover: cover, cover; Steal: steal. Steal the bell and cover your ears for fear that others will hear you. Metaphorically, you are deceiving yourself, and you must try to cover up what you can't cover up clearly.

Grammar: linkage; As predicate, attribute and adverbial; derogatory sense

Extended data:

Synonyms for stealing bells: self-deception, self-defeating, blinding others, stealing incense, stealing bells and ears, self-deception and blinding others.

Synonyms for fabricating numbers: improper use of words, mediocrity, fabricating numbers in the meantime, mixed fish in troubled waters, hiding people's eyes and ears, pretending to be an impostor, being humble, shoddy, and having a wife serving in the army, fabricating numbers.

The antonym of "fill in the blank" is worthy of the name, standing out from the crowd, preferring to be short of things, outstanding, stable in life, genuine, and preferring to be short of things.

Learn from the west to the east, and lose the pace of guarding the mausoleum. Learn from the east, crawl in Handan, be well dressed, crawl in Handan, tread again in Handan, parrot-learn, follow others' footsteps, speak effectively, forget your ancestors, be well dressed, and learn to walk in vain.

The antonym of Handan toddler: choose the good and grow, find another way and be unconventional.

1, valid in the east

Explanation: effect: imitation; Frown. Metaphor is random imitation, and the effect is extremely bad.

From: Zhuangzi's Zhuangzi Tian Yun in the Warring States Period: "Therefore, scholars are ill and worry about it, and the ugly ones see it as beautiful, but they also embrace it and worry about it. When the rich see it, they will stay at home; When the poor see it, they leave with their wives. "

Commentary: A long time ago, Xi Shi walked around with a sad face. An ugly neighbor saw it and thought it was beautiful to frown. When she went back, she was still frowning in the neighborhood. The rich people nearby saw it and closed the door. The poor man saw it and ran away with his wife and children.

Grammar: subject-predicate type; As predicate, object and attribute; derogatory sense

Step 2 fish in troubled waters

Explanation: muddy water: the water is not clear. Metaphor takes advantage of chaos to profit.

From: Lao She's "Four Generations under One Family in the Republic of China": Forty-five: "Someone on the other side is fishing in troubled waters, so take the opportunity to get a qualification."

Grammar: formal; As predicate and attribute; derogatory sense