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Idioms with categories

Idioms with categories

Hall idioms: don't go to the elegant hall, go to the elegant hall, go to the sparrow hall, go to the thin court, go to the palace pavilion, go to the palace, enter the room, beat a retreat, go to the elegant hall, build the hall with a negative salary, be magnificent and magnificent, laugh loudly and get together.

Idiom explanation

(1) Not elegant: the description is not elegant enough.

(2) The unpretentious hall: it describes something that is not valued, and it is "vulgar" (mostly refers to literary works).

(3) Sparrows in the hall: a metaphor for a stable life and a loss of vigilance. This is also a metaphor of disaster, but you don't know it.

④ Chu Que: a metaphor for people who are prepared for danger in times of peace.

(5) Anti-Bogongtang: being tried and questioned in court.

(6) palaces, pavilions and pavilions: houses with more than two floors. Refers to various buildings. Hall: A tall house.

(7) Appearing in court: books: complaints, indictments, etc.; Book search: being questioned; Court: used to refer to the place where officials tried cases. Be questioned in court.

(8) Entering the room: Hall: ancient palace, with the hall in front and the room in the back. Climb into the hall and enter the inner room. Metaphor knowledge or skills from shallow to deep, reaching a high level.

(9) Beat a retreat: It originally meant that feudal officials played drums when they retired from court. Now the metaphor is to shrink back in the middle of doing things with people.

(10) Elegant Hall: An elegant hall. Metaphor is demanding and the realm is perfect.