Vocabulary usually refers to the summary table of new words to be learned in Chinese textbooks.
The vocabulary is "handwritten". Although the textbooks are printed in a standardized way, there are actually authors, who are contemporary authors. Secondly, the list of new words is "regular script", which belongs to block letters.
According to Bian Xiao, the fonts on the pupils' word list were written by contemporary calligraphy artist Sima Yan Shu.
Si Mayan is a famous contemporary calligrapher and calligrapher. He has compiled and published more than 200 kinds of pens, brush copybooks, teaching materials and monographs/kloc-0, which are spread all over the country and deeply loved by the masses, and is known as "the highest copybook in China".
He has won more than 30 awards in international painting and calligraphy competitions, and his works have participated in major painting and calligraphy exhibitions at home and abroad. Selected as a collection of 100 paintings and calligraphy works in China, many of which are engraved in some large-scale forest of steles in China. Its name has been compiled into the international dictionary of hard pen calligraphers. In the Chinese textbooks for primary schools published by People's Education Publishing House, Si Mayan's works are listed as model figures.
Related idioms:
1, cheating
Idiom pinyin
Interpretation of idioms: Er: Yes; Danger: guess. It means I lied to you; You lied to me; Deceive each other.
The origin of the idiom: Zuo Qiuming's "Zuo Zhuan Gong Xuan Fifteen Years" in the pre-Qin period: "I have no deceit, I have no worries."
My heart is like a balance.
Idiom pinyin: wǒ xīn rú chèng
Idiom explanation: It means that you are extremely fair in handling things.
Origin of Idiom: Volume 37 of Feng Tang Shu Chao quotes Zhuge Liang's miscellaneous remarks: "My heart is like a scale, so I can't be heavier than others."
Let me whip first
Idiom pinyin: xiān wǒ zhuó biān
Idiom definition: reading: reading. Metaphor is to take the lead and take the lead.
The origin of the idiom: "Biography of Liu Kun in the Book of Jin": "I am always afraid that my ancestors will slap my ears in front of me when I am waiting for someone at my bedside."
Related words:
1, we [wǒ men]
Personal pronouns. Call yourself several people. See [us].
2. My home
Call yourself.
3. Forget me
Forget yourself for the benefit of the country and the collective. Describe the public and forget the private: ~ for work.
4. Big ego
Refers to the collective (as opposed to the "ego"): sacrificing the interests of the ego and obeying the interests of ~.
5. Self [xi m?o w ǒ]
Refers to the individual (as opposed to the "big ego"): ~ Obey the big ego. Related idioms