Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - What are the sentences that describe "getting angry"?

What are the sentences that describe "getting angry"?

1, Jinling Evening News

Tang Dynasty: Gaochan

I used to accompany the clouds to dusk, and I still accompany the sunset to the autumn sound.

There are infinite painters in the world, and a piece of sadness can't be painted.

2. Join the army seven or four

Tang Dynasty: Wang Changling

There is a dark snow-capped mountain in Qinghai, with long white clouds and a lonely city looking at Yumenguan.

Yellow sand wears golden armor in hundreds of battles, but the loulan is not returned.

3. Thirteen songs in Nanyuan, the fifth song

Tang Dynasty: Li He

Why didn't the great man take weapons to collect the fifty States of the mountain?

Please go to see the paintings of the founder heroes with pictures. Another scholar was once called the aristocrat of a million families?

4. Ji Hai's Miscellaneous Poems (5)

Qing Dynasty: Gong Zizhen

The vast sadness of parting extends to the setting sun, away from Beijing, riding a whip to the east, feeling that people are on earth.

I quit my job and go home, just like a flower falling from a branch, but this is not a heartless thing. It can be turned into the soil of spring and can also play a role in nurturing the next generation.

5. Jing/Du Yishui Song

Pre-Qin Dynasty: Anonymous

The wind blows in Shui Han, and the strong men are gone forever. (reply to one work: reply to another)

Explore the tiger's den, enter the dumpling palace, face upwards and exhale into Bai Hong. (This sentence is suspected to be a supplement to later generations)

Make an appreciative comment

Jing/Du Yishui Song

Pre-Qin Dynasty: Anonymous

The wind blows in Shui Han, and the strong men are gone forever. (reply to one work: reply to another)

Explore the tiger's den, enter the dumpling palace, face upwards and exhale into Bai Hong. (This sentence is suspected to be a supplement to later generations)

Three hundred ancient poems and patriotic elegies.

Translation and annotation

translate

The rustling wind blew the Xiao on the shore very cold, and the strong Ke left and never came back. Killing the king of Qin is as dangerous as going to the Dragon Palace in the den of tigers, but our heroic spirit can even form a white flood. According to the history books, Gao Jianli struck the building, and Jing Ke's elegy "The wind blows the water cold, and the strong man is gone forever" was so tragic that the listener was furious.

After singing for a while, Jing Ke looked up and sighed, and a rainbow appeared in the sky. Gao Jianli changed a tune conveniently and the music became more exciting. Jing Ke went on to sing: Explore the tiger's den, enter the Jiao Palace, exhale from the sky, and turn into Bai Hong. Taizi Dan was finally deeply moved, kneeling on the ground and offering a glass of wine to Jing Ke.

To annotate ...

Rustle: refers to the wind. Yishui: refers to the name of water, which originated in Yixian County, Hebei Province, and was the southern boundary of Yan State at that time.

Xi: Modal auxiliary words.

Brave: Jing Ke is here.