Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - English Idioms Stories for Primary 1

English Idioms Stories for Primary 1

1) All the Idioms in Grades 1-6

It's good to open a book - Bo Bo but not refined - Hundred shots - Catch the wind and catch the shadow

- Respectful - Mixed feelings - Quick as a flash - A bow in a cup and a snake in a snake shadow

- Shuddering - Anachronisms - Unconsciousness - Eclecticism

- Unavailable - Unworthy - Incurable - Unusual < /p>

- Uncommon - Inconsistent - Unusual - Boleh's horse - Banshou < /p>

- White-faced - Eight-faced - Unusual <

- Uncomparable - Incongruous - Bole's horse - Show-off

- White-faced scholar - Eight-faced - Unpecuniary - Pulling up the seedling to grow

- Indomitable - Undying - Thigh to Thigh - Sick to the core

- All in a tangle - Plucked from the mountain and lifted up the tripod - Dr. Buying the Donkey - Iceberg is hard to rely on

- Back to back - Half way through - Not greedy for more - Not greedy for more

- Back to back - Not greedy for more - Not greedy for more < Halfway through the war - Not greedy for treasure - White heads are as white as new

- Better to hear than to see - Not to be bowed down by five bucks of rice - Putting out fires with a paycheck - Innovative

- Not learned without skill - Not a son of a tiger in a tiger's lair - Not far away from a thousand miles - Not because of the heat of the people

- A world of other worlds - Spare no effort - Unrelenting - A hundred-foot pole

- Unprepossessed of strength - Not knowing what to do - A guest is at home - A home away from home.

- Dissimulation - candid - empty - collusion

- Dissimulation - open book - talkative - tongue-in-cheek

- Open the door and invite the thief - unprecedented - hardworking and thrifty - prolonged

- Sleepy beasts - open the sky and the earth - tongue-in-cheek - airborne

- The boat is a sword - popular - the boat is a sword

- The frog in the bottom of the well - the chicken's mouth - the pavilion in the air

- The frog in the bottom of the well - the chicken's mouth - the chicken's mouth - the chicken's mouth

- The sky is the limit - the end of the world - the sky is the limit - the sky is the limit - the sky is the limit

- Militaristic - Zhuangzhou dreaming of butterflies - Zengshen kills people - the strong bully the weak

- Returning to the Zhao - Wei Wei Jie San Jie - no one is better than the other - help a tiger do evil

- Cutting one's own throat - no way to help - quench the thirst for plums - the five days of the capital city

- Dangerous as the eggs - ten thousand deaths - all we need is the east wind - all the winds are ready - all the winds are ready. No matter what you do, you don't rest - One Fu, Many Shoos - One Fu, Many Shoos - Bullying the weak

- Drinking alcohol to intoxicate oneself - A model of a generation - One shot, a thousand pounds - Three rules

- To use the past as opposed to the present - Yegong HaoLong - Peeking into the sky - Overstating the obvious

- One country, three dukes - Taking rules for Dian - Foolish people removing the mountain - A drum of energy

- A single stroke of the brush - Working with tigers for their skins - A different kind of army - Having a foot of spring

- A single stroke - Working with tigers for their skins - A different kind of army - Having a foot of spring

- To hit a stone with an egg - To make a gully out of a neighbor - To be arrogant - To be a penny a dozen

- To strike a blow - To make a tree hard to support - To judge a man by his appearance - To be a feather in his cap

- To have name, but no real name - A promise is worth a thousand pieces of gold - One day's sun, ten days' frost - One know-nothing

- Worthlessness - To ask for what you want - One raccoon, one hill - One thousand miles a day

- One day at a time - One day at a time - One day at a time - One day at a time - One day at a time - One day at a time - To try the law with one's own hands

- not accomplishing anything - all in one net - without hesitation - without any knowledge

- making mistakes again and again - a wise old man - worrying about something - a piece of clothing

- bent on it - one leaf blinds one eye - where there is a will, there is a word for it

- emboldened by the fear of the enemy - quenching one's thirst - ashamed to be ashamed of oneself - being domineering

Wait for the hare: "waiting for a watch, waiting for a rabbit, waiting" means to wait for a watch, waiting for a rabbit, or waiting for a rabbit, or waiting for a rabbit. The idiom of "keep watch" means to wait for the rabbits, and "plant" refers to the roots and stems of trees exposed on the ground. The meaning of this idiom is: wait by the tree, waiting to pick up the dead rabbit. Metaphorically speaking, it is not active efforts to store a fluke mentality, hoping to get an unexpected harvest.

Handan Xuebu: The story is from "Zhuangzi - Autumn Water". The idiom of "Handan learns from others" is a metaphor for imitating others mechanically, not only failing to learn others' strengths, but also losing one's own strengths and skills.

- Handan Xuebu: Handan Xuebu is a metaphor for imitating others mechanically, which not only fails to learn others' strengths, but also loses one's own advantages and skills.

- 狐假虎威:The fox pretends to be a tiger. It is a metaphor for relying on the power of others to bully people.

- Hundred Shots, One Hundred Hits: It describes the accuracy of shooting arrows or guns, hitting the target every time. It is also used as a metaphor for being sure of what you are doing.

- Catch the wind and catch the shadow: The wind and the shadow can't be caught. It is a metaphor for saying or doing something without any factual basis.

- 杞人憂天:The individual in the country of Qi is afraid of the sky collapsing. It is a metaphor for unnecessary or unfounded worries and concerns.

- The frog at the bottom of the well: the frog at the bottom of the well can only see a piece of the sky as big as the mouth of the well. It is a metaphor for a person who has a narrow view.

- 望梅止渴:原意是梅子酸,人想吃梅子就会流涎,因而止渴。 Later, it is a metaphor for not being able to realize one's wishes and comforting oneself with empty thoughts.

- Cup Bow Snake Shadow: Mistaking the shadow of a bow reflected in a wine glass for a snake. It is a metaphor for fear caused by suspicion.

- Zheng Ren Bu Cui (郑人买履): used to satirize those who only believe in dogma and do not care about reality.

- Anachronism: not suited to the needs of the times.

- Anachronistic: not suited to the needs of the times.

- Waiting for rabbits: the original metaphor is used to describe the fluke mentality of trying to get success without making any efforts. Now it is also used as a metaphor for sticking to narrow experience and not knowing how to change.

- Yugong Yishan (愚公移山): a metaphor for the unrelenting transformation of nature and unswerving struggle.

- Qu Tu Jiu Yi Yuan (曲突徙薪):convert the chimney into a curved one, and move away the firewood next to the stove. It is a metaphor for taking measures beforehand in order to prevent calamities.

- Throwing bricks to attract jade: Throwing out bricks to attract back jade. It is a metaphor for using one's own immature opinions or works to draw out others' better opinions or good works.

- Self-contradictory: It means that one's words and deeds contradict each other.

- Yufu: It is a metaphor for a person who has no skills to pretend to have skills, or a person who has inferior goods to pretend to have good goods.

- Carving a boat to seek a sword: it is a metaphor for looking at things in a static way without understanding that they have developed and changed.

- Ye Gong Hao Long: It is a metaphor for saying that you love something verbally, but in fact you don't really love it.

- Mending the prison after the sheep have escaped: it is not too late to mend the sheep's pen after the sheep have escaped. It is a metaphor for finding a way to remedy a problem after it has gone wrong, so as to prevent further losses.

- Painting the snake to add feet: when painting the snake, add feet to the snake. It is a metaphor for doing something superfluous, which is not beneficial but inappropriate.

- Covering the ears and stealing the bells: to steal the bells and cover one's ears for fear of being heard. It is a metaphor for deceiving oneself and trying to cover up things that cannot be covered up.

- Buy a wooden box and return the pearls: buy the wooden box and return the pearls. The metaphor is that there is no eyesight, improper choice

(2) What are the idiom stories suitable for first graders to participate

There are many of these idiom stories, such as some fables and historical stories. These are all possible just choose a favorite one.

(3) First Grade English-Chinese Double Translation Idioms: Dripping Water Through Stone

Dripping Water Through Stone

The water keeps dripping down, and it can penetrate the stone. It is a metaphor that as long as you have perseverance and keep working hard, things will surely be successful. 专

[Pinyin]

dī shuǐ chuān shí

[出处属]

宋-罗大经《鹤林玉露-一钱斩吏》:"乖崖援笔判曰:'a day of money; a thousand days of thousands of money; the rope saws the wood broken; water dripping through the stone. '"

[Example sentence]

Students should have the spirit of dripping water through stone in their daily study.

[NEAR MEANING]

Water dripping through stone Perseverance Rope sawing, wood breaking Tirelessness ...

[Antonyms]

Half way through, shallowly

(4) English-Chinese double-translation idiom story for first grade: The stupid bird flies first

Idioms by The Free Dictionary

The early bird catches the worm

The stupid bird flies first

A bird hatsches six baby birds. The Sixth is very weak and *** all; his sisters and brothers usually bully him.The other birds usually rob food from his mouth, and the Sixth has The Sixth is very weak and *** all; his sisters and brothers usually bully him.The other birds usually rob food from his mouth, and the Sixth has to suffer from hunger.

A mother bird hatched six baby birds on the tree.The Sixth is very weak and *** all; his sisters and brothers usually bully him.

Sisters and Brothers call him "clumsy bird."

Sisters and Brothers call him "clumsy bird".

He determines to exercise more to be healthier, in order to not be laughed by his sisters and brothers.

(5) What are the first-grade idiom stories

A. Sitting in a well and looking at the sky

In a ruined well there lived a frog. One day, the frog bumped into a sea turtle from the East China Sea at the well. The frog proudly boasted to the sea ghost, "You see, I live here how cozy ah! If I want to be happy, I will jump and play around the well, and if I am tired, I will rest in the hole in the wall of the well.

Sometimes I soak my body comfortably in the water, and sometimes I take a pleasant walk in the mud. Look at those little insects, crabs and tadpoles next to me, who can they compare to me! How free I am to occupy this ruined well alone!

Why doesn't the gentleman visit the well more often?" The sea-ghost, having heard the frog's tall tale, wanted to enter the well and look around. However, before it could fully reach in with its left foot, its right foot tripped over the well bar.

It had to take a few steps back and tell the frog what it saw of the sea: "Have you ever seen the sea? The vastness of the sea is more than a thousand miles; the depth of the sea is more than a thousand feet.

In ancient times, there were nine floods in ten years, and the sea did not increase; there were seven droughts in eight years, and the sea did not decrease. The sea is not affected by droughts and floods, and it is true happiness to live in the vast and boundless sea.

Second, cover up the ears to steal the bell

At the end of the Spring and Autumn Period, there was a man named Fan Jishuang in the State of Jin, who had a big bell hanging in front of his house. In the ancient times of our country, both bells and chimes were musical instruments. One day, a man went to Fan Jishuang's house, saw the bell at the door and tried to carry it away secretly. However, the bell was too bulky and heavy for him to carry it away. Then, finally, he came up with a solution: crack the bell and take it back in batches.

So he got a hammer and went to strike the bell as hard as he could. "When--" the first knock up, the bell issued a long and loud sound; and then knocked down, the bell issued the same sound. He thought: "When the bell rings, people will know that I am here to ring the bell.

In this way the bell will be taken away by others, and I will be caught." So he covered his ears so that the bell could not be heard if it rang again, and he thought that since I could not hear it even when I was so close, of course other people would hear it even less, and he could steal the bell safely.

In fact, he was very stupid and ridiculous: although he covered his ears and couldn't hear the bells, other people's ears weren't covered, so of course they could still hear the bells. Later, people summarized this story into the idiom of "cover your ears and steal the bells", which is a metaphor for those who are self-righteous and deceive themselves and others.

Third, the boat seeks the sword

There was a man in Chu who went on a long trip. When he was crossing the river in a boat, he accidentally dropped the sword he was carrying into the rapids of the river. The people in the boat shouted, "The sword has fallen into the water! This Chu immediately carved a mark on the side of the boat with a penknife, and then turned back to everyone and said, "This is where my sword fell."

The crowd looked at the knife-carved mark in puzzlement. Someone urged him, "Go down to the water and find the sword!" The Chu said, "What's the panic, I have the mark."

The boat continued to move forward, and someone urged him to say: "If you do not go down to look for the sword, the boat is getting farther and farther away, be careful not to find it back." The man of Chu still said confidently, "No need to hurry, no need to hurry, the mark is engraved there."

Until the boat stopped at the shore, the Chu man went down to the water where he had carved the mark to find the sword. But how could he find it?

The sword that fell into the river does not travel with the boat, but the boat and the mark on the side of the boat do. By the time the boat reaches the shore, the mark on the side of the boat and the position of the sword in the water will be long gone. Wasn't this Ch'in too confused to use the above method to find his sword?

He spent a lot of time in the water under the boat on the shore, and got nothing, but also attracted the ridicule of the crowd. This story tells us, with the static vision to look at the ever-changing things, is bound to make the mistake of detached from the actual subjective idealism.

Fourth, waiting for the rabbit

During the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, there was a farmer in the State of Song who planted a few acres of land. One day, he was working in the field, and suddenly saw a rabbit darting over like an arrow, slamming into the tree, breaking its neck, and dying when it stomped its legs.

The farmer ran over, picked up the rabbit, and said happily, "This is really no effort at all, and picked up a great bargain for nothing, so I can go back and have a nice meal."

He carried the rabbit to his home, while thinking triumphantly, "I'm so lucky, maybe tomorrow there will be another rabbit run, I can not let go of such a cheap."

The next day, he went to the ground, and did not work, but only guarded the big tree, waiting for the rabbit to run over. As a result, he waited all day for nothing.

He was not satisfied, and from then on, he sat under the tree every day, waiting for the rabbit to crash. He waited and waited and waited until the weeds in the ground grew taller than the crops, and he didn't even see a rabbit again.

V. Mending the Fence

Once upon a time, there was a man who kept a pen of sheep. One morning when he was about to go out to graze the sheep, he realized that one of them was missing. It turned out that there was a hole in the sheep pen. During the night, a wolf came in through the hole and took the sheep.

The neighbors advised him, "Hurry up and fix the sheep pen and plug the hole!" He said, "What's the point of repairing the sheep pen when the sheep have already been lost?" The neighbor's advice was not accepted.

The next morning, he was ready to go out to graze the sheep, and when he went to the sheep pen, he found that another sheep was missing. It turned out that the wolf had come in through the hole again and had taken the sheep.

He regretted not accepting his neighbor's advice, so he quickly plugged the hole and repaired the sheep pen. From then on, his sheep were never taken away by wolves.

Description: If the sheep are lost, fix the sheep pen, and the rest of the sheep will not be lost again. If you make a mistake and correct it immediately, you will be able to minimize it. When a mistake is made and timely remedial measures are taken, the loss that continues to occur can be avoided.

(6) English-Chinese double-translation idiom story for first grade: to Tong 33 Primary School

Idioms by The Free Dictionary: 狐假虎威

Pinyin: hú jiǎ hǔ wēi

Explanation: False: Borrow. The fox pretends to borrow the tiger's power. It is a metaphor for relying on other people's power to oppress people.

Source: "Strategies of the Warring States - Chu Ce I": "The tiger begged for all kinds of beasts and ate them, but he got the fox. ...... Tiger thought so, so he traveled with it. Beasts see all go, the tiger does not know the beasts fear themselves and go, thought fear fox also."

Example sentences: Sure enough, the House to borrow, how good not to borrow? I'm afraid of being swindled by someone else, but this can't protect him. Ming Ling Mengchu (明-凌濛初)《二刻拍案惊奇》卷二十

Pinyin Code: hjhw

Synonym: bully others by force, dog by force

Antonyms: stand out in the world, stand alone in the field

Hysterical Chinese idiom: Foxes follow tigers

Lantern Riddle: The wind is smooth and the armpit smells thick

Usage: as a predicate, determinant, object; referring to the use of an opportunity to bully others. Others

English: bully people by flaunting one's powerful connections

Story: A long time ago, there was a tiger in the forest who wanted to eat a fox when he saw it, and the fox exclaimed, "I'm the king of beasts sent by the Jade Emperor. and see if the animals in the forest are afraid of me." The tiger thought nothing of going along, and sure enough, the animals ran away

狐假虎威

[dictionary] (比喻借别人的威势欺压人)the fox assuming the majesty of the tiger -- borrowing power to do evil; (like) a donkey [ an ass] in a lion's hide; a fox masquerading as a tiger; assume someone else's authority as one's own;

[例句]"狐假虎威 "这个成语的意思是借着别人的势力去巍. means to borrow someone else's authority to bully or scare people.

This idiom means relying on another's power to bully or frightenothers.

(7) Elementary Grade 1 English-Chinese Double Translation Idiom Story: 守株待兔

Idioms by The Free Dictionary: In the country of Song, a farmer was turning over the soil in his field. Suddenly, he saw a rabbit scurrying out of the bushes next to him in a panic, hit a tree stump on the edge of the field, and fell there motionless. The farmer went over to take a look: the rabbit was dead. Because it ran so fast, it broke its neck. The farmer was so happy that he had picked up a big, fat rabbit for nothing. He thought to himself: "If he could pick up rabbits every day, he would have a better life". From then on, he no longer wanted to work the land. Every day, he put the hoe on the side, lying in front of the tree stump, waiting for the second, the third rabbit to bump into the tree stump. There is no such thing as a bargain in this world. Of course, the farmer did not pick up any more rabbits, but his field was left barren. Because he did not get the rabbit again, the farmer himself became the laughing stock of Song.

English Translation

During the period of Warring States, many people lived on farming. One day, a farmer found that a hare bumped against a stump and died One day, a farmer found that a hare bumped against a stump and died because it ran so quickly that it did not see the stump. That a hare bumped into the sump was less likely to happen again. However, the farm chose to sit near the stump, waiting for another hare, instead of farming to make a living. Eventually, the farmer starved to death.

Waiting for him