Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - a two-part allegorical saying

a two-part allegorical saying

Two-part allegorical sayings to describe "I don't know much" are:

1, the dog barks at the moon-I don't know less.

2, stick out your mouth and lick the moon-I don't know the sky.

3, the tiger's mouth is looking for food-I don't know the sky and the earth.

4. The grasshopper jumped into the pond-I don't know the depth.

5, ants go down the pond-I don't know the depth.

6. Take a big axe in front of Lu Ban-I wonder how small it is.

7. Playing with a broadsword in front of Guan Yu-overreaching.

8. The dwarf wants to ascend to heaven-I don't know how high the sky is.

9. Toad wants to eat swan meat-I don't know how many.

10, frog in the well-never seen the world; I have no idea.

1 1, blind people dye cloth-I don't know the depth.

12, the vast sea-I don't know the depth.

The pinyin of "I don't know my little place" is bzh and tiāngāodo he, which means I don't know how high the sky is and how deep the ground is. Describe arrogance and ignorance. From Zhuang Zhou's "King of Zhuangzi": "Confucius cut the piano and played string songs, digging and dancing thousands of times. Zi Gong said,' I don't know whether the sky is high or underground.' "

The original meaning of "I don't know the depth" is that I don't know the depth of water; The latter is often used to describe unreasonable interests. From Shi Ming Naian's Water Margin: "I don't know how deep it is."

"Bite one's teeth" means not estimating one's own ability, which is a metaphor for overestimating one's own strength. From Zuo Zhuan's Eleven Years of Hidden Gong in the Pre-Qin Dynasty: "Don't cross it, don't do it."