Idioms praising teachers

Idioms praising teachers are as follows:

Idioms praising teachers include painstaking efforts, tireless teaching, being a model, being a model and teaching well.

1, worked hard.

This idiom comes from historical stories and works of literati. This idiom has two origins, Li Hechuan by Li Shangyin in the Tang Dynasty and Gui Chengpeng by Han Yu in the Tang Dynasty. Later, people combined painstaking efforts with painstaking efforts to form the idiom painstaking management. It can be used as predicate, attribute and adverbial in a sentence, which is often used to express the hardships of work and literary creation.

2. Teach people tirelessly.

It is an idiom derived from the works of literati, and its related allusions are derived from The Analects of Confucius. Explain that you are willing to teach people without getting bored. It can be used as predicate, attribute and adverbial in a sentence, which has positive significance.

3. Mentor and friend.

It means a good teacher and a good friend who can teach and help people. Used to describe a friend who is both a teacher and a friend. It is a joint idiom, which is used as subject, object and attribute in a sentence and contains many commendations.

4. Be a teacher.

It is an idiom derived from a historical story, and the relevant allusions of idioms come from Tang Baiyao's Book of the Northern Qi Dynasty and Wang Xinshu. The original meaning of being a teacher is to be an example and model for people to learn in morality and behavior. Later, this idiom was widely used by teachers and can be used as predicate, object and attribute in sentences.

5. Teach well.

It means that there are many ways to guide education, which come from strange situations witnessed in the past twenty years. For example, the master taught me when I was a teenager. If I teach well, it is the direction and direction, and it is also angular.