Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - Tie one's own cocoon

Tie one's own cocoon

Self-trapping means: the original meaning is that silkworms spin silk to make cocoons. It's a metaphor for doing something, and as a result, you are trapped. It is also a metaphor for getting into trouble for yourself.

Self-restraint: [Zu Jien z f ù]?

1.? Description: Silkworms spin silk into cocoons and wrap themselves in cocoons. It's a metaphor for doing something, and as a result, you are trapped. It is also a metaphor for getting into trouble for yourself.

2.? From: Tang Juyi's poem "Jiangzhou has arrived in Zhongzhou to Jiangling": "Who saves candle moths and cocoons entangle people." Song Luyou's "Poems on the Book Circle of Jiannan": "Life is like a spring silkworm, and it binds itself with a cocoon."

3.? Example: We need to formulate the necessary rules and regulations, but we should not be too cumbersome and tie our hands and feet.

4.? Grammar: linkage; As predicate and object; derogatory sense

5.? Synonyms: self-inflicted, stagnation, painting firmly, self-inflicted.

6.? Antonym: turn cocoon into butterfly, break cocoon into butterfly, and blame others?

: 1, excessive self-esteem makes us more sensitive, self-restrained, and finally we can't appreciate the joy of life.

2. Facing the new situation, we should break the old rules, keep pace with the times and not tie ourselves down.

3. Silkworms are trapped in cocoons because they save themselves blindly.

You see the problem too complicated and think too much, but you dare not do it. It's really self-defeating

5. In order not to go to school, I fell and broke myself, and my parents cleaned me up.