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What do you mean by eye contact?

What do you mean by eyebrow-eye contact? Convey affection with eyes.

Origin of idioms

Master Wang Yuan's The Romance of the West Chamber has the first discount: "Only when your eyebrows are still flirting.

Idiom usage

As predicate and object; Use "flirting" For example, Qing Li Garbo's "Officialdom in the Sky" 36: "Although the face is fat, it is an eyebrow eye and a pervert."

Idioms are stereotypes in Chinese vocabulary. Idioms, everyone says they have become words, and so do idioms. Idioms are mostly four-character, and some are three-character, five-character or even more than seven-character.

Idiom is a major feature of traditional culture in China, which has a fixed structure and a fixed sentence, indicating a certain meaning. It is applied to a sentence as a whole, with subject, object, attribute and other components.

A large part of idioms are passed down from ancient times and represent a story or allusion. Some idioms are just a miniature sentence. Idiom is a ready-made word, similar to idioms and proverbs, but slightly different.

Basic explanation

Fixed phrases comes from ancient classics or works, historical stories and people's oral stories. It is a unique and long-used fixed phrases in ancient Chinese vocabulary. The meaning of idioms is incisive, often implied in literal meaning, rather than simply adding up the meanings of their components. Its structure is tight, and it is generally impossible to change the word order, extract or increase or decrease its components at will.

Its form is mostly four characters, and there are also some three characters and multi-characters, which are mostly composed of four characters. Simply put, idioms are words that are well known, can be quoted from classics, have clear sources and allusions, and are highly used.

Idiomatic old saying

Don't copy the idioms of predecessors in ancient Chinese, but be independent and self-reliant; We should use the idioms of our predecessors in CET-4 and CET-6, and should not seek differences.

Liu Yuanqi's "Returning to Qian Zhi" Volume 12: "Ancient prose should not be copied from predecessors' idioms, but should be strengthened by strangeness; Four or six should use the idioms of predecessors, and it is not appropriate to seek differences. "

Qing Li wrote in Love, Music and Melody: "If you make a stubborn sentence, it is not self-made. You should only quote idioms."

Lu Xun's fierce view on my Tomb Festival: "How can an unfaithful woman (China said that she is unfaithful, but there is no idiom, so she can only be collectively called' unfaithful') harm the country?"