Idiom: National Language Dictionary Idiom Definition:No.: 405 Idiom: ㄒㄩㄢˊ |ㄞㄜㄇㄚˇChinese Pinyin:. When you come to the edge of the cliff, hold on to the horse and don't go any further. Metaphor to the edge of danger and turn back in time. The language is still primitive. Zheng Guangzu's The Third Fold. ※ Symbol: Le (this is the original collection of Chinese characters "rein in from the cliff" corresponding to the emoji "",and vivid symbols are added to compare PNG pictures and animated GIF pictures to Chinese characters, which is also convenient for everyone to copy and paste them on social media and other places. Click on the emoji symbol ""and the picture link to see a more detailed introduction of the symbol in the EmojiAll emoticon dictionary. Interpretation of idioms and allusions: "Pull back from the cliff" The original text "Pull back from the cliff". Pulling back from the cliff means being on the edge of the cliff and being able to pull back in time. Metaphor to the edge of danger and wake up in time. This idiom appeared in literary works earlier, and it is Jacky Guangzu's zaju "Ding Zhiyong Strange". In the third part of the play, it is said that the protagonist Zhong Lichun set up a strange "Nine Palaces and Eight Diagrams" array, asking his men to cheat and defeat it, and lured Qin Jun general Cao Sun into the array. Cao Sun was tied up after joining the army, and Zhong Lichun would make fun of his blind and ignorant organization for setting her up. He would only chase the defeated enemy general and put himself in danger. Nowadays, it's like a ship sailing in the middle of the river, and it's too late to catch up. Now crashing into the array is a turning back! In the article, "Stop riding when you are on the edge" means "Stop riding when you are on the edge". The idiom "pull back from the brink" is used to describe a person turning back in time when he comes to the edge of danger. There is also a story in the eighth volume of Ji Yun's Notes on Yuewei Caotang in Qing Dynasty. I heard two news that a scholar lives in Yunju Temple in Beijing. I met a boy who lived together and was about 14 or 15 years old. They were very close. Later, I learned that the boy was a apricot blossom. Although the young man argues that "essence" and "charm" are different, he has to admit that he approached scholars in order to absorb their essence and make himself a human being. The scholar realized that this was no different from ghosts and immediately pushed the boy away. Therefore, Ji Yun praised him and said, "It is great wisdom for a scholar to pull back from the brink." This means that this scholar can be alert to danger and turn back in time. This is great wisdom! ※ Source: Yuan. Zheng Guangzu's The Third Fold is1> I wonder if our plane will be chased by someone. Ah! It's too late for you to find that the river is leaking. How many times do you have to rein in your horse before you can ride it? . You were chasing and fighting, but you didn't see anything and hit our array. You are in no way back. [Note] (1) This fellow: This guy, this kid. It means contempt and meanness. (2) The ship arrived in the river late to fill the leak: it is a metaphor that it is impossible to prevent the occurrence of defects or errors in advance, and it is too late to remedy the problems when they have already appeared. See "Catching Leaks in the River Center". (3) Stop riding: Stop the horse by stopping the reins. Ride, sound | Get on the horse. Documentary evidence: 0 1. Clear. Notes on Ji Yun's Reading of Wei Caotang. Volume 8. If I hear 2: "The scholar pulled back from the cliff, it is great wisdom. Usage: Semantic description refers to turning back in time when you are on the verge of danger. Usage category is used in the expression of "timely awakening" Example: "0 1" The police advised these gangsters to pull back from the brink, lay down their weapons and surrender. & lt02 & gt Your mind is sinking. If you don't pull back from the brink, you will regret it. & lt03 & gt If you go your own way, you will bring trouble to your family. It's time to pull back from the brink. & lt04 & gt You are addicted to drugs. If you don't stop from the brink, you will be very dangerous. & lt05 & gt Put down the butcher knife and become a Buddha. If you pull back from the brink now, your mistake can be saved. & lt06 & gt He used to be addicted to gambling, but fortunately, he pulled back from the brink and gave up, which did not cause the regret of separation. & lt07 From the speech, we can deeply feel that you are on the verge of crime. I hope you can pull back from the brink and repent, so as not to regret it for life. & lt08 "Seeing that the friend who wandered the Jianghu together in those years was punished for his crime, Lao Zhang was glad that if he hadn't stopped from the brink and turned over a new leaf, he might be in jail today. Idioms solitaire's idiom beginning with "horse"
The horse head looks forward to the horse head, and the horse head looks forward to the horse head.
The mirror hangs high, Qin Jing hangs high, the mirror hangs high, and the idiom begins with the word "hang"
The idiom "horse" at the end of the word "horse" is written on the cliff.
It means that the deer in the heart is a horse, childhood friends are not donkeys, Ma Fei gets on the cliff, Ma Fei is the black sheep, the blind man is blind, a thousand troops are blind, Brother Jin is iron and sharp, Ma Fei gets on the cliff, and Ma Fei loses to the north.
Refer to the idiom in the Chinese Dictionary: Pull back from the cliff.
Refer to the detailed explanation of the idiom "rein in from the cliff" in Mandarin Dictionary;
Hanging, cliff, halter, horse.