Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - A face full of flowers to play an accurate number

A face full of flowers to play an accurate number

Face full of flowers: 7

Face full of flowers is introduced as follows:

It describes a person who is full of happiness.

Happy is introduced as follows:

Happy, a Chinese word with the pinyin kāi xīn, means in a good mood and happy.

Singularity is introduced as follows:

Singularity (pinyin: chéng yǔ, English: idiom) is a stereotyped word in the Chinese vocabulary. The idioms, which are spoken by all, have become the language of the people, so they are idiomatic. Most of the idioms are four characters, but there are also three characters, five characters and even more than seven characters.

Chinese idioms are a major feature of traditional Chinese culture, with fixed structural forms and fixed sayings, indicating certain meanings, and are applied as a whole in statements, taking on the components of subject, object and determiner.

A large part of idioms is inherited from ancient times, and it represents a story or allusion. Some idioms are miniature sentences. Idioms are also a kind of ready-made words, similar to idioms and proverbs, but also slightly different. Most of the idioms are 4 words, but there are also 3-word as well as more than 4-word idioms, and some of them are even divided into two parts separated by a comma.

Ancient Chinese vocabulary is characterized by fixed phrases that have been used for a long time and come from ancient classics or writings, historical stories and people's oral stories. The meaning of idioms is incisive and often implied in the literal meaning, not a simple addition of the meanings of its constituent parts.

It is tightly structured, and generally cannot change the word order arbitrarily, change or add or subtract its components. Its form to four words mostly, there are some three words and more words, mostly composed of four words. Simply put, idioms are, say everyone knows, can be quoted from the classics, have a clear source and allusion, and the use of a fairly high degree of terminology.

Chinese idioms are fixed phrases formed after a long period of use and refinement of the Chinese language, which is richer than the meaning of the word and grammatical function is equivalent to the word of the language unit, and is rich in profound ideological connotations, short and pithy, easy to remember and easy to use. And often accompanied by emotional color, including pejorative and positive, of course, there are also neutral.