Joke Collection Website - Talk about mood - What idioms are there about "head and tail"?

What idioms are there about "head and tail"?

From beginning to end.

Pass through: pass through. From beginning to end, everything is full of meaning.

From beginning to end, from beginning to end. Refers to the whole process or content of something.

Hiding one's head and protecting one's tail originally meant that calligraphy was strong. Now it means to talk and do things evasively, fearing to expose the whole truth.

Hide one's head and expose one's tail. Hide one's head and expose one's tail. The description is evasive and doesn't tell the whole truth.

Silkworm head and phoenix tail describe calligraphy as dignified and light.

From beginning to end, from beginning to end. Refers to the whole process or content of something.

The leader will announce the result at the end of the meeting. Describe quick thinking and strong understanding. It's the same as "knowing the end of the road"

Big head and small tail are still "anticlimactic" Metaphor is tight before doing things, and loose after doing things.

The dovetail of the cutter head is a metaphor for the strength and strength of the pen.

Knowing the ending of the story, we know the result from the beginning. Describe quick thinking and strong understanding.

To change your original appearance is to change your original appearance. Metaphor is just that the form has changed, but the essence has not changed.

Anticlimactic, head as big as a tiger. At first, the metaphor was very powerful, but later it was very weak and endless.

Tiger head and mouse tail are as big as a tiger and as thin as a mouse. Metaphor means doing things with great momentum at first, then with little momentum and no end.

The end of the street refers to the street.

Streets and alleys refer to streets and alleys.

Eyebrows and eyes refer to the appearance between eyebrows and eyes.

The metaphor of a dragon's head and a snake's tail is grand at the beginning and attenuated at the end.

The beginning of the year and the end of the month refer to the beginning of the year to the end of the twelfth month, generally referring to one year. It also refers to the beginning and end of the three biographies of Spring and Autumn Annals. In the Tang Dynasty, examiners often used it to test whether scholars in the Ming Dynasty were familiar with classics.