Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - Proverbs corresponding to Broken Glass
Proverbs corresponding to Broken Glass
Speak frankly-
Birds of a feather-
Muddle along—
You deserve it-
Find fault—
Broken glass-
Cyclops read a book-
Toad wants to eat swan meat-
Wick weaving—
The old monk's patchwork clothes-
Hang firecrackers on your eyebrows—
Eating a bowl, looking at the pot—
Dogs and mice mess around-
Three days fishing, two days drying nets-
It's hard to sing in one hand-two people clap their hands and call a spade a spade-say what you have; Birds of a feather flock together-the world is as black as a crow, just muddle along-a monk who rings the bell every day deserves it-shooting himself in the foot-picking bones from eggs and breaking glass-there is no silver here. ...
Shattered glass, pronunciation: yù gà i mí zhā ng; ; In Chinese idioms, definition means trying to cover up the truth of bad things, but the result is more obvious.
"Make a name for yourself" is often called "shattered glass" later. "More; Zhang, extraordinary. Trying to cover up the truth will only make it more obvious.
Its corresponding word is, there is no silver here.
Folk jokes say that someone buried silver in the soil and wrote a note on it: "There is no silver here." Neighbor Al saw the note and stole the silverware. He also wrote a note: "Al next door didn't steal it." This story is a metaphor for trying to cover up and cover up, doing some small moves, but the result is even more exposed.
Shattered glass, there is no silver here. They are a match made in heaven, and they are corresponding proverbs.
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