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Idiom reduplication

The idioms are slim, belated, lifelike, and prosperous.

1. Slim (Chinese idiom) generally refers to Tingting Yuli. Tingting Yuli is a Chinese idiom, also known as slim or jade-standing, pronounced as tíng tíng yù lì, describing a woman's slender figure. , also describes the tall and straight shapes of flowers and trees. Source: "Book of Northern Qi·Biography of Xu Zhicai": The white clouds first saw five-colored objects in the sky. A little closer, they turned into a beautiful woman, standing several feet away from the ground.

2. Shan Shan Lai Late (Pinyin: shān shān lái chí) is an idiom, which first came from Ban Gu's "Hanshu·Biography of Wife's Relatives·Mrs. Xiaowu Li" of the Eastern Han Dynasty. Shan Shan Lai Late refers to walking slowly and leisurely and being late; it describes arriving very late slowly. Generally used as predicate and object in sentences.

3. Lifelike, a Chinese idiom whose pinyin is xǔ xǔ rú shēng, usually refers to the vivid and lifelike artistic images in paintings and sculptures, as if they were alive. From "Zhuangzi: Equality of Things": In the past, Zhuang Zhou dreamed of a butterfly, which was a lifelike butterfly. I don’t know Zhou Ye. Suddenly, I feel confused and confused.

4. Prosperity (Pinyin: xīn xīn xiàng róng) is an idiom, which first came from Jin Dynasty Tao Yuanming's "Return and Lai Xi Ci". Xinxiangrong refers to the lush and vibrant appearance of vegetation; later it was used to describe the flourishing and prosperous scene of a career. It has a complimentary meaning; it is generally used as a predicate, attributive, and adverbial in a sentence.

Characteristics of idioms:

From the perspective of Chinese grammar, a Chinese idiom is equivalent to a phrase in a sentence. Because a phrase can serve as different components in a sentence, an idiom is The grammatical functions are also diverse. Chinese idioms have various forms. As mentioned above, there are four-character idioms, five-character idioms, six-character idioms, seven-character idioms, eight-character idioms, etc. Among them, four-character idioms are the main form of Chinese idioms.

So the analysis of the grammatical functions of idioms here mainly focuses on the analysis of four-character idioms serving as syntactic components. Idioms usually come from ancient literature or common sayings, and their style is solemn and elegant.