Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - Swan ambition is an idiom story. What other idiom stories have you seen? Please write three.

Swan ambition is an idiom story. What other idiom stories have you seen? Please write three.

Swan's ambition is an idiom story. I have also seen the idiom story of a man standing in the snow, holding a book and smelling a chicken dancing.

-Idiom stories

The Children's Education Series edited by Cui was published by Heilongjiang University Press in September 2009. Some idioms are selected from a large number of idioms that people use every day to tell stories with profound images. The language images of these idioms are vivid and easy to understand, which can help children understand history, things and knowledge, accumulate beautiful language materials and feel the unique charm of China traditional culture.

In April 2020, it was listed in the Reading Guidance Catalogue for Primary and Secondary School Students (2020 Edition) of the Basic Education Curriculum and Textbook Development Center of the Ministry of Education.

Idioms are the accumulation of history, and there is a far-reaching story behind every idiom. Idioms in idiom stories are selected from a large number of idioms that people use every day. The language of these stories is vivid and easy to understand, which can help children understand history, learn knowledge and feel the unique charm of China traditional culture.

Excessive enthusiasm will spoil things.

Metaphor is a bad thing to go against the objective law of the development of things and be eager for success. Once upon a time, there was a farmer in the Song Dynasty who was worried that the seedlings in his field were not tall, so he went to see them every day. Three days passed and the seedlings did not move. He thought of a way and hurried to the field to raise seedlings tree by tree. Go back and tell my son that the seedlings have grown much. When my son ran into the field, all the seedlings died.

Calling a deer a horse-deliberate misinterpretation

Zhao Gao wants to rebel (usurp the Qin regime), and I'm afraid the ministers won't listen to him, so they set a trap and test it first. So he brought a deer to II and said, "This is a horse."

The younger generation smiled and said, "Is there anything wrong with the Prime Minister? You call a deer a horse. " Ask the ministers around you. Some ministers are silent, some deliberately cater to Zhao Gao and say they are horses, while others say they are deer. Zhao Gao used the law as an excuse to secretly slander or frame people who said they were deer. Since then, ministers have been afraid of Zhao Gao.