Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Idioms of what, what, what.

Idioms of what, what, what.

Frog in the well, priceless treasure, urgent need, immediate pain, friend of a gentleman, friend who never leaves, and so on.

(1) Frog at the bottom of a well is an idiom, pronounced as j ǐ ng d ǐ zh and w ā, which means that the frog at the bottom of a well thinks that the sky is only as big as the wellhead. Metaphor is short-sighted. The source "Zhuangzi Qiushui": "Well frogs can't talk to people in the sea, but they are confined to the air."

(2) priceless treasure, priceless treasure, refers to extremely precious things. From Tang Yu Xuan Ji's poem "Giving a Daughter Next Door": "It is hard to find a priceless treasure."

(3) Urgent need is an idiom, pronounced as rá n mé izhh and jí, meaning urgent need. Describe the urgency of the matter. Source Songshi Puji's "Five Lights Meeting Yuan" Volume 16: "Q:' What is an urgent sentence? "The teacher said,' burning eyebrows'." "

(4) The pain that touches the skin is pronounced as: qiè fzhó tê ng, an idiom in China, which means that it is closely related to oneself. Personal experience. The metaphor is deeply touched. From the biography of Wang Shouren in Ming Dynasty.

(5) A friendship between gentlemen is as light as water is an idiom in China, and its pinyin is j ū n z ǐ zh and ji ā o, which means that the friendship between sages is as plain as water, but not flashy. Language "Zhuangzi Miki": "The friendship between gentlemen is as light as water, and the friendship between villains is as sweet as ever; A gentleman is indifferent to his relatives, and a villain is willing to rest. "

(6) A friend who never leaves is an idiom. Pinyin is mòn zhòJiāo, which refers to very close friends or friends with similar interests. Simply put, it is like-minded. From the master Zhuangzi.