Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - An explanation of the big lie

An explanation of the big lie

"Big lie" is an adjective phrase meaning "great lie" or "incomparable lie". It is often used to describe some very absurd or untrue statements or statements. The literal meaning of this sentence is "fill in a big lie", which emphasizes the unreliability and absurdity of this lie.

The word "big lie" originated from the traditional culture of China, and similar usages have already appeared in Zuo Zhuan, such as "big lie" and "big talk". In ancient times, people thought that the sky was too high and out of reach, so "closing the sky" was an exaggerated word with strong description. The connection between "big lie" and "big lie" emphasizes the very serious degree of this lie.

"Big lie" is widely used in various fields in modern language, especially in political, social and media fields. In the political and social fields, "big lie" usually refers to false information and misleading statements issued by the government or some authoritative organizations, which are often deceptive and seriously affect social stability and public trust. In the field of media, "big lie" refers to the distortion of facts, spreading rumors and speculating false news released by the media, which not only destroys the public opinion environment, but also damages the good image and credibility of the media.

In short, "big lie" is a very negative word, which is usually used to describe those false words and information. These words and information may be deliberately distorted for some purpose, or they may be misinformed out of ignorance or negligence. We should keep a clear head, and don't easily believe and spread those unverifiable voices and remarks, so as not to be far-fetched or misleading.