Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - Children's story video
Children's story video
Idiom: Nine Niu Yi hairs.
Pinyin: Ji Ni and má o
Description: A hair on nine cows. Metaphor is a very small number in a very large number, which is insignificant.
Source: Han Sima Qian's Letter of Appointment: "If the servant is punished, if the nine cows die, what is the difference with the ants?"
For example, this is a county-level official, especially in Niu Yi, who can lift tens of thousands of families in a city out of poverty. Song Lu No.9 Hospital and Song Cao's Books
Pinyin code: jnym
Synonym: a drop in the ocean, a spark.
Antonym: countless, too numerous to mention.
Usage: as subject, object and attribute; Metaphor is insignificant
English: a hair in nine cowhide.
Story: During the Western Han Dynasty, Sima Qian inherited his father Sima Tan's official position as Taishiling, and was imprisoned by Liu Che, the Emperor of the Han Dynasty, and suffered the most cruel "corruption". He suffered serious physical and mental trauma, so he had to confide in his good friend Ren. Even if he dies, he is only a hair on nine cows, but he will live to do great things.
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2. Where can I download the free video of children's stories?
There are many children's stories, but there are not many good ones that children like.
I am a kindergarten teacher. I usually download children's stories from Tian Hui Children's Story Network, and children like them very much.
There are many children's stories online in Tian Hui, including children's bedtime stories, wisdom stories, fables, fairy tales, celebrity stories, historical stories, fairy tales, intellectual stories and idiom stories. ...
3. Where can I download a story video suitable for children?
See if you need to download it on your mobile phone or on your computer. There are many children's softwares on your mobile phone, such as doll road telling stories, children's e-books and so on.
4. Idiom story encyclopedia "Birds make bows and hide" children's story video
A bird hides its bow when it is finished.
Metaphor means that after things are successful, those who do their best kick down the ladder.
Source: Sima Qian's "Historical Records of the King of Yue Gou Jian's Family": "Birds are exhausted, good bows are hidden; A sly rabbit dies and a running dog cooks. "
5. The children's idiom story "Answers" is played continuously in the video encyclopedia of children's stories.
Before a painter paints, he already has the image of bamboo in his mind-he has a well-thought-out plan/strategy.
Pinyin: xi not xi not xiōng yǒu chéng zhú abbreviation: xycz.
Usage: subject-predicate type; As predicate, attribute and adverbial; Have positive significance.
Description: The original meaning of painting bamboo is to have an image of bamboo in your mind. After metaphor has made up his mind before doing things.
Source: Shi Wen Can Draw Bamboo: "So if you draw bamboo, you must first have bamboo in your heart."
Commissioner Mao decided to join the troops in the south immediately. Chen Bojun's "Chairman Mao leads us to Jinggangshan"
Postscript: bamboo shoots are born in the heart; Bamboo grows on the navel; Swallow a pen into your stomach.
Riddle: everyone keeps it in mind; Banqiao painting is intentional.
Idiom story: painters in the Northern Song Dynasty have the same language, word and ability. The bamboo he painted is well known, and many people come to paint it every day. Where is the secret of Wen Tong's painting bamboo? It turned out that Wentong planted all kinds of bamboos in front of and behind his house. No matter spring, summer, autumn and winter, it is cloudy and rainy. He often goes to the bamboo forest to observe the growth and changes of bamboo, and figure out the length and thickness of bamboo branches and the shape and color of leaves. As soon as he has new feelings, he returns to his study, spreads paper and grinds ink, and draws his impressions on paper. Over the years, the images of bamboo in different seasons, different weather and different times have been deeply imprinted in his mind. As long as you concentrate on writing and stand in front of drawing paper, the various forms of bamboo observed on weekdays will immediately emerge in front of your eyes. So every time he draws bamboo, he looks very calm and confident, and the bamboo he draws is vivid and lifelike.
When people praised his paintings, he always said modestly, "I just painted the mature bamboo in my heart."
There was a young man who wanted to learn to draw bamboo. He heard that the poet Chao was very good at Wentong's paintings, so he asked for advice. Huang wrote a poem for him, including two sentences: "You can use it to draw bamboo, and you have answers."
The story comes from Su Shi's Notes on Yu Wenke yún dāng Gu Yan in the Northern Song Dynasty. "Have a plan" means that you are fully prepared before doing things and are very sure of the success of things; It also means calm, very calm.
6. Idiom Story Encyclopedia "Honest People Buy Shoes" Children's Story Video
Buying shoes by Zheng people is a fable in the pre-Qin era, which comes from "Han Feizi's Foreign Reserve is Left". It is not only an idiom, an allusion, but also a fable. It mainly tells the story that Zheng people can't buy shoes because they believe in "scale" too much. It reveals Zheng people's habit of sticking to dogma and relying on data. This fable satirizes those dogmatists who stick to the rules and shows that if you don't consider flexibility, you will eventually achieve nothing.
Original text:
Zheng Guoren who wants to buy shoes (some books say that "Zheng Guoren has shoes to buy") must first take care of themselves and let them sit. Go to town and forget to fuck it. When he finished his duty, he said, "I forgot my endurance!" " "On the contrary, take it. On the contrary, the city, hence (Su) shall not be fulfilled.
People say, "Why not try?"
Yue: "? ng (? ng) is reliable and has no confidence."
Translation:
Once upon a time, there was a Zheng man who wanted to buy a new pair of shoes. He measured his feet in advance and put the measured size on the seat. (Zheng Guoren) When I arrived at the market, I forgot to take measurements. (Zheng Guoren) I picked out my shoes and found out, "I forgot my size." Just go home and get the measurements. When he returned to the market, the market had already dispersed, and no one bought shoes at last.
Someone asked, "Why don't you try on your shoes with your own feet?"
He replied, "I would rather trust the measured size than my own feet."
7. Children's story video encyclopedia "Ye Cheng Xiao He defeated Xiao He" children's idiom story
Idiom: Success is Xiao He, and failure is Xiao He.
Pinyin: chéng y Xiāo hé, bàI y Xiāo hé.
Commentary: Xiao He: Prime Minister of Emperor Gaozu Liu Bang. Success is due to Xiao He, and failure is also due to Xiao He. To make a metaphor, the success or failure of things is caused by this one person.
Source: Hong Song Mai's "Rong Zhai Continued, Xiao He to Han Xin": "The letter was recommended by the general, but it was actually recommended by Xiao He. Now that it's dead, it has its own plan. Therefore, slang has the language of' success is also Xiao He, and failure is also Xiao He'. "
For example, make a sentence: success is also Xiao He, failure is also Xiao He, and some people are still unhappy. Feng Ming Munlong's Novels of Ancient and Modern Times, Volume 3 1
Pinyin code: cyxhbyxh
Synonym: Ye Cheng Xiao He defeated Xiao He.
Usage: as object and clause; It means that success or failure depends on one person.
English: Success or failure is attributed to the same person.
Story: At the end of Qin Dynasty, Han Xin defected to Xiang Yu, but failed to change his mind to Liu Bang. He left angrily and was not reused. When Xiao He learned about it, he recovered Han Xin the next month. Liu Bang named him King of Qi, but worried about his rebellion, he demoted Han Xin to Huaiyin and took back the relieving. Liu Bang personally conquered Chen Si, and Lv Hou asked Xiao He to trick Han Xin into Weiyang Palace and kill him.
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8. Do children learn words through video stories?
Learning words through video stories is not good for children. Children's eyes are immature, and watching videos for a long time will damage their eyes, so try not to show them videos. Children's memory cycle is very short, and what they have learned will soon be forgotten. So don't try to make children learn things. Let children spend time in play, which is more conducive to the development of children's brains.
9. Children's Idiom Story "Food of the Past" Children's Story Video
Idiom: copying is what you get.
Pinyin: JiēláI zhüshí Interpretation: refers to insulting charities.
Idiom story:
During the Zhou Dynasty, Qi suffered from famine. A rich man named Qian Ao put some food on the side of the road, waiting for the hungry people to eat. Soon, a hungry man covered his face with his sleeve and stumbled over. Qian ao, with food in his left hand and drink in his right, said to him: Oh (impolite greeting)! Come and eat! Hungry Han stared at Qian Aohe's food and said, I'm so hungry, just because I don't eat this' delicious food' (shouting for charity)!
Unexpected food refers to insulting charity.
10. Video Encyclopedia of Children's Stories "Buy a Gift and Return a Pearl" Children's Idiom Story
Buy a present and return the pearl.
Once upon a time, a Chu man had a beautiful pearl and was going to sell it.
The Chu people found a precious magnolia, made a box (bamboo rafters) for pearls, and smoked the box with cinnamon spice. Then, many beautiful patterns were carved on the outside of the box with the feathers of kingfisher.
A Zheng people hold the box in their hands and can't put it down for a long time. Finally, he paid a high price for the Chu people's box. Zheng paid the money and came back with a box. But I came back a few days later. The Chu people thought that Zheng people regretted returning the goods. Before the Chu people could finish thinking, Zheng people had come to the Chu people. Zheng handed the pearl to the Chu people and said, "Sir, all I bought was a box. You left a pearl in the box and I returned it. " So the Zheng people gave the pearl to the Chu people and went back. The Chu people stood there awkwardly with the returned pearls.
Buying gifts and returning pearls, an ancient idiom in China, comes from Han Feizi. The original intention is to buy jewelry and leave only beautiful boxes, without real high-value jewelry. Often used as a metaphor for lack of foresight and improper choice.
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