What are the four-character idioms for Chuzhou Xijianjian?

Jianjianjian Road Jianfangjianfangjianggou

Jiangu Jianhe Jianhu Jianjing Jianliu

Jianmao Jianmen Jianpan Jianpan Qi Jianpine

Jian Kuma Jian Xi Jian Gorge Jian Yan Jian Yin

Jian Yin Jian Jun Jian Zhou Yin Jian Yin Jian

Snow Jian Jian Jian Huang Jian Qing Jian Xi Jian

He Jian Qiao Jian Chao Jian Han Jian Xian Jian

Ping Jian Pan Jian Gou Jian Hui Jian Bijian

Bei Jian Tan Jian Bai Jian Luo Jian Shi Jian

Liu Jian Dry Jian Mountain Jian Jian Bottom Pine Jian Xi Mao

Chun Shen Jian Chuzhou Xijian Dining Pine Drinking Jian Panshan Shing Jian Birdsong Jian

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Bijian soup high mountains, deep streams, cold forests and streams 2. What are the four-character idioms with pick, swelling, stream

Pick:

1. Pick three pick four : Refers to picking and choosing, disliking this or that.

2. Find faults: Deliberately finding faults.

3. Picky: a metaphor for being picky and demanding.

4. Pick and choose: refers to carefully selecting from among them

5. Choose Buddha and burn incense: It is a metaphor for judging how others act or how well they treat others.

6. Gold panning and sand picking: looking for gold from the sand. It is a metaphor for refining words and sentences when writing.

7. Picking and choosing: It is a metaphor for picking and choosing, only those that are beneficial to oneself.

8. Picking out the sand and picking out the gold. It is a metaphor for selecting the essence from a large number of things.

Swelling:

1. Bruise on the nose and forehead: The nose is blue and the forehead is swollen. Describes severe facial injuries.

2. Blue nose and swollen face: The nose becomes blue and the face becomes swollen. Describes severe facial injuries.

3. Blue nose and swollen eyes: The nose becomes blue and the eyes become swollen. Describes severe facial injuries. It also refers to the embarrassing appearance of suffering a serious blow or setback.

4. Swollen nose and blue eyes: The nose is swollen and the eye circles are blue. Describes severe facial injuries.

5. To pretend to be fat: It is a metaphor that one would rather pay the price but pretend to be great.

6. To pretend to be fat: to pretend to be great despite being incapable or empty inside.

7. Bruised face and swollen nose: describes serious facial injuries.

8. Fragmented and bloated: fragmented: incomplete; bloated: excessively fat. Physically mutilated and obese. The description is very ugly.

9. Fragmentation: fragmentation: dispersion. Refers to the gathering of scattered things

Stream:

1. Shiyi Shenjian: used to describe strict laws

2. Linhan Jiansu: refers to autumn and winter The scene of trees withering and streams drying up.

3. Dining in pines and drinking in streams: refers to living in seclusion.

Hope to adopt 3. Chuzhou West Stream

Chuzhou West Stream Wei Yingwu Pity the lonely grass growing beside the stream, and there are orioles singing in the deep trees.

The spring tide brings rain late in the day, and there is no boat crossing the wild river. [Notes] 1. Chuzhou: now Chu County, Anhui Province.

2. Xijian: Located in the west of Chu County, its common name is Shangma River. 3. pity: love.

4. Deep tree: A tree with dense branches and leaves. 5. Yedu: a ferry in the countryside.

"Chuzhou West Stream" is a famous landscape poem and the most famous landscape painting by Wei Yingwu, a poet of the Tang Dynasty. This poem was written when the author was in Chuzhou for assassination. The author visited the Xijian of Chuzhou and wrote this poetic poem.

Although the poem describes ordinary scenery, with the poet's touch, it becomes a rhymed painting with a profound artistic conception. The first two sentences describe the spring scenery, loving the quiet grass and valuing the oriole, which is a metaphor for music and keeping the festival, but jealous of the beauty; the last two sentences describe the scene of the spring tide with rain and the rushing water, which contains a feeling of being out of place and unable to do so. Its use is helpless sadness.

The poem describes the scenery of late spring that the author saw during his spring trip to Xijian. It describes the actual scene of the ferry in the countryside, and is also an image portrayal of the poet's situation and mood at that time, revealing a touch of sadness. Information about the work: Chuzhou The sentence that turns the flow and sets off the leisurely and tranquil scene is "The spring tide brings rain and comes late, and there is no boat on the wild crossing."

Source "Chuzhou West Stream" is selected from "Wei Suzhou Collection" "Chuzhou West Stream" Wei Yingwu There is only pity on the grassy stream growing beside it, and there are orioles singing in the deep trees. The spring tide brings rain in a hurry, and there is no boat crossing the wild crossing.

"Chuzhou West Stream" written by Huang Yujiang, a famous contemporary calligraphy artist, in 2006 Edit the annotated translation of this paragraph Word explanation 1. Chuzhou: Today's Chuzhou City, Anhui Province. 2. Xijian: A small stream in the western suburbs of Chuzhou City, some people call it Shangma River.

That is today's Xijian Lake (formerly Chengxi Reservoir). 3. Du Lian: Du love, a kind of sole love for Youcao.

4. Spring tide: spring rain. 5. Yedu: an unmanaged ferry crossing in the wilderness.

Wei Yingwu Chuzhou Xijian calligraphy calligraphy [1] 6. Horizontal: refers to floating at will. 7. There are orioles singing deep in the trees: The orioles deep in the shade of the trees make alluring calls.

Oriole, oriole. Deep trees, deep shade.

8. There is no one crossing the wild ferry: There is no one at the ferry in the countryside, only the empty ferry boat floats freely. Yedu, a ferry in the wild.

Freely and freely floating. Rhyme Translation: Rhyme Translation: I love the quiet grass growing by the stream. On the stream there are orioles singing in the deep forest.

The spring tide comes with the night rain, and the unmanned boats at the ferry drift sideways with the waves. Translation: I really like the wild grass growing by the river, which is so quiet and full of life; from the depths of the dense woods on the river bank, the calls of oriole birds are constantly heard, which is so melodious.

Because of the spring rain in the evening, the river flowed faster like a tide; at that twilight wilderness ferry, no one was crossing the river anymore, only small boats were floating alone on the river. Appreciation of works. This is landscape. A famous poem and one of Wei Yingwu's representative works. The poem was written in the second year of Jianzhong (781) of Emperor Dezong of the Tang Dynasty when the poet was serving as the governor of Chuzhou.

The seat of Chuzhou in the Tang Dynasty is now the urban area of ??Chuzhou City, Anhui Province. Xijian is located in the western suburbs of Chuzhou City. This poem describes the quiet scene beside the mountain stream.

It describes the poet's spring trip to Chuzhou to enjoy the scenery in the West Stream and what he saw when the late tide brought rain. The first two sentences describe the spring scenery, loving the quiet grass and valuing the oriole, which is a metaphor for music and keeping the festival, but jealous of the beauty; the last two sentences describe the scene of the spring tide with rain and the rushing water, which contains a feeling of being out of place and unable to do so. Its use is helpless sadness.

The whole poem reveals the tranquility and sadness. This is a famous landscape poem and Wei Yingwu's most famous landscape painting.

Although the poem describes ordinary scenery, after the poet's touch, it has become a rhymed painting with a profound artistic conception. This article was written in the second year of Jianzhong (781) by Emperor Dezong of the Tang Dynasty, when Wei Yingwu was appointed governor of Chuzhou.

The author visited Chuzhou Xijian (Xijian is in the western suburbs of Chuzhou City) and wrote this poetic poem. Huang Xuejiang's calligraphy (Xijian, Chuzhou) The first two lines of the poem "I only pity the quiet grass growing by the stream, with the orioles singing in the deep shade of the trees" means: The poet only loves the quiet grass growing by the stream, with the orioles singing deep in the shade of the trees. Ming.

This is an elegant scenery intertwined with beautiful colors and beautiful music. "Pity alone" means preference, and preference for quiet grass reveals the poet's indifferent mind.

The last two sentences "The spring tide brings rain in the evening, and there is no boat crossing the wild ferry" means: It rains in the evening and the tide rises more rapidly. There are no pedestrians at the ferry in the countryside, and a ferry is parked across the river. inside. This scene of a rowing boat on a ferry in the rain contains the poet's sadness at his own inaction, which makes people think.

He also ordered Ji Ming to explain that Wei Yingwu would rather be a grass that no one pays attention to than to hold those big official positions. Wei Yingwu successively served as the "Three Guardsman" and the governor of Chuzhou, Jiangzhou, Suzhou and other places.

He was deeply worried about the political corruption in Zhongtang and was also very concerned about the people's livelihood, but he was powerless. This poem expresses his mood euphemistically.

Whether there is any sustenance in this poem, and what its meaning is, has always been debated. Some people think that it is a metaphor throughout the text, and it is a stab at "the gentleman is at the bottom, and the villain is at the top"; some people think that "this occasional description of the scenery of the Western Stream does not need to have any underlying meaning."

In fact, the emotions revealed in the poem are vague and obvious. When the grass and the oriole are mentioned together at the beginning of the poem, the poet uses the word "pity alone", which has an obvious meaning, showing that the poet lives in poverty and is modest, and does not live in high places. The last two sentences contain a kind of helpless and sad feeling that is out of place and useless in the leisurely scene of rushing water and boating. The poet describes the scenery with emotion, uses the scenery to describe his thoughts, writes about the scenery he likes and dislikes, and talks about the love affairs he likes and dislikes. His tranquility and sadness are naturally revealed.

Express the author’s love for life. Poetry Appreciation: This is a famous piece of landscape poetry, describing what happened during a spring outing to Chuzhou’s West Stream to enjoy the scenery, and on a night ferry trip with rain in the late tide.

The first two sentences describe the spring scenery, loving the quiet grass and valuing the oriole, which is a metaphor for keeping the festival and being jealous of the beauty; the last two sentences describe the urgent spring tide with rain and the scene of the rushing water and the boat crossing, which contains A kind of helpless sadness that is not in its place and has no use. The whole poem expresses a tranquil mind and sad feelings. Edit this section and introduce the author. Wei Yingwu (737~790) was a poet of the Tang Dynasty.

A native of Chang'an (now Xi'an, Shaanxi). His poems are most admired for their ancient style and seven rhymes.

From the age of 15, Sanweilang served as Xuanzong's personal attendant, going in and out of the palace and traveling with his retinue. When the Anshi Rebellion broke out, Xuanzong fled to Shu and became homeless and neglected his duties, so he decided to study.

From Daizong Guangde to Dezong Zhenyuan, he successively served as Luoyang Cheng, Jingzhao Prefecture Gongcao Canjun, E County Magistrate, Bibu Yuanwailang, Chuzhou He.