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What does it mean to wear anything but flattery?

The works "worn" here: exposure; Reveal the meaning. Such as: wear (perforation; Exposure); Chuanbang, Chuanbang (dialect. Exposed).

Flattery: Flattery means that I especially like to please people with sweet words. No matter what happens, as the old saying goes, everything is likely to be seen through and disliked. But only praise is what everyone likes to hear.

The whole sentence means that most false and hidden things will be discovered one day, and only compliments will not be exposed and exposed. Used to satirize and ignore objective reality, especially to flatter and flatter others.

Extended data

Flattery hint

Once upon a time, there was a rich man outside the Great Wall. He bought a good horse and was very happy. So I invited my three sons-in-law to drink. After three rounds of drinking, the rich man took the BMW out of the stable and asked the three sons-in-law to write poems praising the good horse.

In order to please the old father-in-law, the three sons-in-law searched all the good sentences.

After a while, the eldest son-in-law came up and said in a clear voice, "There is Jin Baihe on the water, and my husband rode to Yinshan Mountain. After a hundred miles, the golden needle has not yet sunk. " The rich say yes again and again.

The second son-in-law took his time and read word for word: "Put goose feathers on the fire, my husband rode thousands of miles to Yuyao, but the goose feathers were not burned." The rich man was overjoyed.

At this time, it was the third son-in-law's turn. The third son-in-law is too talented to know what to say. He only patted BMW's ass. BMW got impatient and farted. The third son-in-law had a brainwave: "The horse farted, and the father-in-law rode to Huiji for tens of thousands of miles, leaving the fart door open." The old rich man is in distress situation.

There are three theories about the origin of flattery.

It is said that in the Yuan Dynasty, Mongolians had a habit. When two people meet a horse, they should pat each other's ass to show respect.

Second, a good Mongolian rider pats the horse's ass when he meets a fierce horse, making the horse feel comfortable, then jumps on the horse and goes straight away.

Third, Mongolians love horses. If the horse is fat, those two strands will inevitably swell, so when I see the horse, I like to pat my ass and boast. It can be seen that "flattery" is a custom and has no derogatory meaning.

But snobs see powerful people riding his horse, no matter whether his horse is good or bad, they all try to flatter him: "good horse for adults, good horse for adults!" " So "flattery" has become synonymous with flattery, which is very derogatory.