Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - The idiomatic story of Hanging a Beam and Stabbing a Share

The idiomatic story of Hanging a Beam and Stabbing a Share

The idiomatic story of Hanging a Beam and Stabbing a Strand is as follows:

There was a character in the Han Dynasty called Zuo Si (左思), who, when he was a young man, because of his family's poverty, could not supply himself with scriptures, so he resolved to sell his body and become a slave to work for a family as an odd-job man and to earn money for his tuition. Since he had to endure trials and tribulations in his daily life, he made a painting of painful flesh in his home, with a picture of a strand of wood suspended above the head of an agonized man as a wake-up call to make himself seek knowledge.

Finally, Zuo Si worked hard and diligently to study the scriptures, and was able to challenge his perseverance, his will, with meat spikes in a grueling environment. Under the stimulation of "hanging from the beam and stabbing the femur", he studied hard step by step, and finally became a talented scholar and celebrity.

The idiom of "hanging from a beam and stabbing one's thigh" vividly expresses the hardship and pain in the process of learning, and is a kind of dedication with great courage and perseverance, which reminds people to pay attention to the struggle and hard work in the process of learning, and expresses the cherishing and respect for knowledge and education. The idiom of "hanging from a beam and stabbing the femur" means to struggle painfully and diligently in order to learn knowledge.

Hanging beams and stabbing strands of stock in Chinese idioms:

1. In order to improve his business ability, he utilized every rest time to hang beams and stab strands of stock, read and study.

2, In the face of the tediousness of his work, he always maintained the spirit of hanging on to the beam and firmly completed his tasks step by step.

3, in order to realize the ideal, he resolutely left his hometown, came to a foreign land to fight alone, hanging beams and stabbing strands, in the competition continue to grow stronger.

4. In the face of the sudden epidemic, the medical staff defied hardship, hanging beams, sticking to their posts, and guarding every life with their practical actions.

Chinese Idioms:

Chinese Idioms are part of the history of our country, idioms are the accumulation of history, behind every idiom there is a far-reaching story, which is the crystallization of the wisdom of the people of our country for thousands of years. They are characterized by their profoundness and timelessness, and their simplicity and conciseness. Reading idiom stories, you can understand the history, understand the reasoning, learning knowledge, accumulation of beautiful language materials.

So, learning idioms is a necessary way for young people to learn Chinese culture. Idioms tell some truths with profound and imaginative stories and allusions. Idioms are words that make sense, and they lay the foundation of our country's cultural path. It was later compiled into a series of books called "Idioms and Stories".

Synopsis:

Acient Chinese idioms are the accumulation of history, and behind every idiom there is a story with profound meaning. The idioms in Idioms Stories are selected from a large number of idioms used by people in their daily life. The language of these stories is vivid and easy to understand, which can help children to understand history, learn knowledge and feel the unique charm of traditional Chinese culture.