Joke Collection Website - Joke collection - Look at the picture and guess the idiom flower falls on the stool on the right and on the paper on the left

Look at the picture and guess the idiom flower falls on the stool on the right and on the paper on the left

Look at the picture and guess the idiom: the flower falls on the stool on the right and falls on the paper on the left

LUò yīng bīn fēn, a Chinese idiom. Describe the beautiful scene of falling flowers. Source: Tao Qian of Jin Dynasty's "Peach Blossom Spring": "Suddenly I came across a peach blossom forest, hundreds of steps across the bank. There were no miscellaneous trees in the middle, the grass was delicious, and the fallen flowers were colorful. Fishermen were very surprised."

See the picture Guess there are two flowers on the left side of the idiom and on the right side of the drum. The answer is the origin and history of drumming to spread flowers. According to literature, drumming to spread flowers is a fun game played at ancient Chinese banquets. It is a type of drinking ceremony. It is also called "drumming to spread flowers" and it has already appeared in the Tang Dynasty. The book "Jiegu Lu" of the Tang Dynasty mentioned that Li Longji was good at playing drums. Once he played a song on the drums, and the willow branches that had not sprouted at first spit out green. This allusion was originally "beating drums to encourage flowers", and later was used as a drinking order and changed to "beating drums to spread flowers". Du Mu's poem "A Night Banquet at Yanglanpu" contains "The fragrant balls bring warmth to the sleeves, and the wine gleams brightly in the heart." We can learn about the scene of beating drums and passing flowers around at banquets in the Tang Dynasty. Fan Chengda of the Song Dynasty wrote a poem in his "Shangyuan Ji Wuzhong Festival of Things": "The wine racks are stacked with drums first, and the lantern market is sold early." Chapter 54 of "A Dream of Red Mansions" also has a description of beating drums to spread flowers. In order to listen to Jia Mu and Sister Feng telling jokes, everyone deliberately asked the female Xian'er (blind female artist) who was playing the drum to stop drumming. There is also a fun game similar to drumming and passing flowers, called Liushang. People sit on the ground one by one on the shore, place a wine glass on the upper reaches of the water, and let it drift up and down. Whoever the wine glass stops in front of will drink and compose poetry. Look at the picture and guess the idiom Level 17: Man on the left, horse on the right, what is it?

Single-handedly

dān qiāng pǐ mǎ

The explanation originally refers to one person in a battle People go into battle. Metaphorical action has no one to help.

Sourced from the poem "Wujiang" written by Wang Zun of the Chu Dynasty in the Five Dynasties: "The soldiers dispersed and their bows weakened the tiger's power, and they broke through the encirclement single-handedly."

The structure is combined type.

Used generally as subject, attributive, and adverbial.

Synonyms: lonely, fighting alone, helpless

Antonyms: strength in numbers, thousands of troops

Example: Zhu Qiang ~ rushes into Shenzhen; wants to Do something earth-shattering. The head is on the left and the body is on the right. Guess the idiom

Some of the flowers on the body and head fell on the dung, and some fell on the paper. Guess the idiom

Falling under the yin and mingling_ Explanation of the idiom

Pinyin: zhuì yīn luò hùn

Definition: Yin: mat; Ming: toilet. They fell with the wind, some floating on the mat, and some falling in the manure pit. It is a metaphor for the difference between good and bad situations.

Source: "Liang Shu·Rulin Zhuan·Fan Zhen Biography": "Human life is like a tree with flowers, all growing on the same branch, all on the mat, related to the fence, falling on the dung ”

Look at the picture and guess the idiom: The body is on the left and the head is on the right

The body and head are in different places (the body and head are in different places) shēn shǒu yì chù

[Interpretation] Head: head; Yi: different; Department: place. Refers to beheading.

[Quotation] Tang Dynasty Chen Ziang's "Book of Unjust Prison of Shen Zongren": "If you are convicted in heaven, your body and head are in a different place, and you are like an ant, how can you be called it?"

[Synonym] Separation of body and head

[Example] Since I have been in the East Palace, I have not lost any virtue. Even if I have committed some evil deeds, I will not be demoted to a lower rank. ◎Look at the picture and guess the idiom in Chapter 9 of "The Romance of the Gods" by Xu Zhonglin of the Ming Dynasty. There is a push of money on the left and the word "Luoyang" on the right paper

Idiom: Luoyang Paper is expensive

Pinyin: luò yáng zhǐ guì

Explanation: It means that the work is valuable and widely circulated.

Source: "Book of Jin·Zuo Si Zhuan": "So wealthy families competed to pass down the writing, and Luoyang was very expensive for it." There is an idiom for plum blossoms falling on the stool

Falling 迺溷

zhuì yīn luò hùn

[Interpretation]? Yin: Yin mat; Ming: toilet. They fell with the wind, some floating on the mat, and some falling in the manure pit. It is a metaphor for the difference between good and bad situations.

[Quotation]? "Liang Shu·Rulin Zhuan·Fan Zhen": "Human life is like a tree flower, with the same branch and the same stem, falling with the wind, with its own blow. The curtain falls on the mat, and falls on the side of the dung from the relevant fence."

[Synonyms] Falling wormwood, floating wormwood

[Usage. [ fěn bái dài lǜ]

[Explanation] Generally refers to women’s makeup.

[From] "Big Move" by Qu Yuan of the Warring States Period: "Pink is white and black is black, Shi Fangze is the only one." Guess the answer by looking at the picture and guessing the two characters "fly" on the right side of the idiom

Missing

bù yì ér fēi

Comments

Flying away without wings. It is a metaphor for the sudden loss of items. It also means that things spread quickly.

Source

"Guanzi·Jie": "The sound of flying without wings is also the sound." "Warring States Policy·Qin Ce III": "What everyone said is moved, and flying without wings is the sound." . ”

For example

A full one hundred and sixty yuan is enough. (Guo Moruo's "Revolutionary Spring and Autumn Period: Ten Years of Creation")

Synonyms

Spread like wildfire and disappear without a trace

Antonyms

Leave intact Move, lose and recover

Afterwords

Balloons go to the sky; rockets go to the sky

Riddles

Ding; rockets; artificial satellites; balloons go to the sky

Usage

Contracted form; used as predicate, attributive, and adverbial; metaphor for things missing or news spreading quickly

English translation

take wings to itself

Historical story

During the Warring States Period, King Zhao of Qin sent General Wang Ji to lead his army to attack Handan, the capital of Zhao State, 17 After a month of failure, the soldier Zhuang came to Wang Ji and said, "Please reward the soldiers and boost their morale. We will definitely conquer the city in one fell swoop. Because the good news will spread quickly." Wang Ji refused to listen, and he was killed by the King of Qin after he failed to attack the city. Look at the picture and guess the idiom: There are two fallen leaves on the left and one word for autumn on the right

Falling leaves know autumn: Basic explanation: When you see yellow leaves on the ground, you know autumn is coming. It is a metaphor that the development and changes of the situation can be predicted through certain signs

Pinyin pronunciation: luò yè zhī qiū

Synonyms: One leaf falls and the world knows autumn

Usage: complex sentence structure; used as predicate and object; metaphor that the development of the situation can be predicted through certain signs

Idiom source: "Wenlu" written by Tang Geng of the Song Dynasty: "The immortal monk cannot figure out how to count Jiazi" , a fallen leaf tells the world of autumn."