Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - Near-sense idioms 100 groups of high school
Near-sense idioms 100 groups of high school
High school idioms are listed as follows:
1, trekking through the mountains, dusty, windy meals, all have the meaning of "a hard journey".
2. To rob, to fish in troubled waters, and to take a sheep by the hand all mean "to take advantage of an opportunity to take something".
3. To disagree, to express one's own views, and to hold one's own opinion, all have the meaning of "differences of opinion, not unified".
4, the south of the rut, the back of the road, the edge of the wood, all have the meaning of "the original intention and purpose is not consistent, can not achieve the desired purpose".
5, painstakingly, miserably, exhaustively, all have the meaning of "painstakingly do things".
- Previous article:Food advertising language
- Next article:What are the two new things in the two new and one heavy construction?
- Related articles
- Which of the three Halloween festivals is more famous?
- Traditional relief thought
- Traditional industrial zone and new industrial zone
- What are the eighteen skills a woman must learn in ancient times?
- What are the two historical works? What are their characteristics?
- How to package and design high-grade tea gift boxes?
- How much is a beautiful bike?
- Russian traditional dress What clothes do Russians wear?
- It's amazing that ice was available in the summer in ancient times! How did they all preserve it?
- What fun games are there in the wedding room? Six games that are not vulgar.