Joke Collection Website - News headlines - English idioms about animals

English idioms about animals

1. English idioms about animals are as follows:

1, even a bug will become a coward.

2. A black sheep is a black sheep.

3. Kill two birds with one stone

Glare like a tiger staring at its prey.

5. Pull out a tooth from the tiger's mouth.

6. anticlimactic is anticlimactic.

7. Dragons and fish are mixed together.

8. pass the fisheye off as a pearl.

9. Monsters and demons, cows, gods, snakes and ghosts

10, the fox penetrated the tiger's ferocity, although it was true.

1 1, a bunch of hooligans.

12, evil accomplices and friends.

13, chicken and dog pieces

14, mice can only see one inch is myopia.

15, a horse keeps running.

16, success at once.

The cat cried to death and the mouse cried to death.

18, a narrow winding path.

Even small people can become cowards.

20. Black sheep Black sheep

2 1, kill two birds with one stone.

22. Glare like a tiger at its prey.

23. Pull out a tooth from the tiger's mouth.

24, anticlimactic anticlimactic

25. pass the fisheye off as a pearl.

26. Monsters and demons, cows, gods, snakes and ghosts

27. The fox penetrated the fierce Smith of the tiger.

28. A group of hooligans.

29. Evil companions are friends.

30. Chicken and dog pieces

Second, the definition of words:

Evil gangs, pronounced as hú péng gǒu dǎng ǐ ng, refer to some idle friends, which is a derogatory term.

Fisheye and pearls are mixed together, pronounced as yú mù hùn zhū, which is an idiom in China, pretending pearls with fisheye. Metaphor is confusing the real with the fake.

Smith is a fable of the Han nationality in the pre-Qin period. False: borrow. The fox used the tiger's threat to scare away all the animals. Later, he used "Smith" to mean to rely on or rely on the strength of others to bully and intimidate people.

Look at it, its pinyin is h ǔ sh ? d ā n d ā n, which means to observe like a tiger trying to hunt. Describe staring greedily, ready to plunder.

Kill two birds with one stone, pronounced Y and Ji an Shu ā ng di ā o, which means to kill two birds with one stone with superb archery, which means to do one thing to achieve two goals.