Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - What are some close synonyms with positive and negative connotations?

What are some close synonyms with positive and negative connotations?

Positive words - negative words

Looking at death as if it were a home - dying

Constant - stubborn

In the same boat*** - in a mess

Eloquent - gibberish

Highly advanced - not moving forward

1, 视死如归

拼音: shì sǐ rú guī

Interpretation: To regard death as common as going home. It describes a person who is not afraid to sacrifice his life. Source: Han Fei Zi (韩非子-外储說左下): "Three armies have formed a formation, so that the soldiers look at death as if they were at home; I am not as good as Duke Chengfu."

2. Dying Struggle

Pinyin: chuí sǐ zhèng zhā?

Interpretation: The struggle before death, trying to prolong one's life. It is a metaphor for a desperate attempt to prolong one's life when one is about to perish.

Origin: Ran's Yan Yang Tian, Chapter 127: "He has really reached the moment of death struggle."

3, Chaste and unyielding

Pinyin: jiān zhēn bù qū

Interpretation: chaste, temperate. Bending, yielding. Firm and temperate, never yielding.

Origin: Xunzi Fa Xing (荀子-法行):"Strong and unyielding is also righteousness."

4. Stubbornness

Pinyin: wán gù bù huà

Interpretation: insisting on one's own opinion and refusing to change it, describing a person who is very stubborn.

Origin: Qing Dynasty - Li Baojia, "A Little History of Civilization", 6th time: "Beifu was once in that prefecture, and also did a term as a governor, and the people in the place were extremely stubborn."

5. Same Boat*** Jì

Pinyin: tóng zhōu gòng jì

Interpretation: To sit in a boat and **** across the river together. It is also a metaphor for the same interests and benefits. It is also used as a metaphor for having the same interests.

Origin: Sun Zi - Jiu Di (孙子-九地):"""The Wu people and the Yue people are inimical to each other, but when they cross the river in the same boat, when they encounter the winds, they save each other as if they were right and left-handed."

6, Lupus for Treason

Pinyin: láng bèi wéi jiān?

Interpretation: Lupus, a wolf and lupus go out together to harm livestock; the wolf uses its front legs and the lupus uses its hind legs to both run fast and climb high. It is a metaphor for colluding with each other to do bad things.

Origin: Qing Dynasty - Wu Cornelius, "Twenty Years of Witnessing the Strange Present Situation": "Poets and painters in a lousy situation, the girl who complains about the man who is obsessed with the girl and the man who is in love with the girl and the man who is in love with the girl."

7. Kan Kan and Talk

Pinyin: kǎn kǎn ér tán

Interpretation: kǎn kǎn, to speak in a straight and calm manner. It means to talk or lecture with a straight face, and refers to talking with a straight face and calmness, which is used to describe a person who is good at conversation and has good manners.

Origin: The Analects of Confucius - The Country Party: "Chao, speaking with the lower daofengs, Kan Kan Ru also."

8. 胡言乱语

拼音:hú yán luàn yǔ?

Interpretation: to talk nonsense without any basis, or to speak nonsense.

Source: Song Shi Pu Ji, "The Five Lights", Volume 16: "These two old men, each of them is good with thirty sticks. Why? One said long and short, a nonsense. Although this is the case, let's let one go."

9. Gao Ge Měng Jìn

Pinyin: gāo gē měng jìn

Interpretation: full of optimism on the way forward.

Origin: Jiefang Daily 1996.6.13: "China's advertising industry soars."

10: Shrouded in fear

Pinyin: guǒ zú bù qián

Interpretation: describes a person who is afraid to move forward because he or she has some concerns.

Origin: Warring States - Qin - Li Si, "The Book of Remonstrance Against the Evicted Guests": "So that the men of the world will retreat and not dare to go westward, and will not be able to enter the Qin with their feet wrapped up in their mouths."