Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - Idioms at the beginning of list words

Idioms at the beginning of list words

Idioms at the beginning of the word "bang" include "famous on the list" and "caught off the list".

Common ones are: selling officials at the top of the list, catching officials at the bottom of the list, and being unknown on the list, among which being famous on the list is the most commonly used. There is no end to learning. Of course, tangible learning is completed, but it does not mean that we can be proud of the world. A smart mind can only become smarter if it is constantly filled with rich knowledge, just as a healthy body can only be maintained through constant exercise!

A person's name is on the list of successful candidates.

Refers to the name on the list posted in the exam, which describes the meaning of winning the list or being selected. The ancients took the imperial examination, and the names of the people who were finally admitted were written on the list and posted on the wall. The celebrity on the list was admitted, which is a great happy event. Later, being on the list means being admitted, passing the exam, and then showing glory.

Open doors sell officials.

This is an idiom to sell officials and titles, which refers to publicly posting and selling official titles. The origin of the idiom: The Biography of the Three Kingdoms of Wei Zhi Dong Zhuochuan, "Therefore, Zhang is Wei" Pei Songzhi quoted as saying: "When Emperor Han Ling sold his official position, Duan Qirui, Stuart Cui Lie, his followers and Zhang Wen all invested tens of millions and five million yuan to buy the three fairs."

Catch up under the list

"Catch the son-in-law under the list" is a kind of marriage culture in Song Dynasty, that is, on the day when the list was published, rich gentry from all over the country went out to compete to choose Deng Di's son-in-law, which was simply robbery. People called it "catch the son-in-law under the list", and the notes in Song Dynasty mostly involved "catch the son-in-law under the list". This kind of "husband", which is similar to money transaction, contains specific social and cultural connotations, indicating that the wealthy civilian class in Song Dynasty longed to enter the upper class with the rise of economy.