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Positive idioms, four-character idioms

Positive idioms are as follows:

1 study hard and make progress every day

2. Work hard and persevere.

3. High morale and vitality.

4, hanging beams and stinging stocks, smelling chickens dancing.

5, forget all about eating and sleeping, study and practice hard.

6, strive for the upper reaches, perseverance

7. Make persistent efforts.

8, wearing a star Dai Yue, dripping wears away the stone.

9, great wisdom and courage, desperate

10, unyielding.

There are many positive four-character idioms.

Go all out, be loyal to the country, be aboveboard, make up for it diligently, be stubborn and blunt, cut wood with a saw, drop water wears away a stone, make a needle with an iron pestle, gather sand into a tower, smell chickens dancing, hang a corner of a book, be inspirational as ice, hang a beam and stab a stock, have high morale, work hard day and night, work tirelessly, learn endlessly and tirelessly.

Lofty, enthusiastic, hardworking, ambitious, diligent, charitable, clean and white, draw out a sword to help others, be happy to help others, persevere, steal the shine from the wall, learn to give charcoal in the snow, work hard, hold ice in winter, study hard and practice hard.

Peeping into caves, racing against time, herding sheep, listening to scriptures, studying in the pool, burning balm continuously, striving to be independent, sitting on the mountain and watching tigers fight, persevering, staying up all night, striving for perfection, determined to learn, never letting go of books, making unremitting efforts, cutting through thorns and so on.

proper noun

Idioms are similar to proper nouns, scientific terms, proverbs, two-part allegorical sayings, quotations and common phrases composed of four words in some respects. For example, proper nouns and scientific terms are fixed phrases.

Proverbs, two-part allegorical sayings and quotations are not only fixed phrases or sentences, but also have meanings similar to idioms. Ordinary phrases composed of four words are relatively simple, and their forms are the same as most idioms, such as "East, West, North and South" and "Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter", but these are not idioms.

A clear understanding of the differences between idioms and proper nouns and scientific terms will help us to determine what is an idiom and what is not. Briefly explain this aspect. Idioms express general concepts. For example, the idiom "falling apart" can be used to describe a failed flower, a failed army or a scattered crowd.