Pinyin: qiātóu qùwóI
Note: removing the first two parts also means removing the useless parts.
Source: Jiang Zilong's Happy New Year: "Catch up with two festivals in one month, and you can't finish half a month's work in one month!"
For example, his memory is made of sweat and pain, and he can't just talk without playing, and he doesn't want to pinch his head and tail when he talks.
2、? Hide one's head and expose one's tail-reveal some, but not all.
Pinyin: cáng tóu lüwóI
Explanation: hide your head and expose your tail. The description is evasive and doesn't tell the whole truth.
Source: Bird can ask for the song "The Lip of the Finishing Eye, Going Home": "Leaving your post early is far from right and wrong, and keeping the head and tail."
For example, making sentences: as soon as you hang someone else's fake signboard, there will be many faces to restrain you, so that you have to hide your head and tail; Have fun, how can you be satisfied!
3、? Speak and do things, afraid to expose the truth.
Pinyin: Cang Li Hu
Explanation: The original meaning of calligraphy is to use pen powerfully. Now it means to talk and do things evasively, fearing to expose the whole truth.
Source: Han Caiyong's "Nine Potentials": "Hide the head and protect the tail, the strength is in the words, the pen is hard, the skin is beautiful, and it is unstoppable."
4, anticlimactic
Pinyin: h incarnation
Description: The head is as big as a tiger and the tail is as thin as a snake. At first, the metaphor was very powerful, but later it was very weak and endless.
Source: Yuan Kang Jinzhi's "Li Kui jy's Negative Spine" is the second fold: "Then I will move those two white faces for you, with my back to the text, telling right and wrong. This fellow dares to be ruthless and anticlimactic. "
Example: Xiaoqi may write well, but she has a problem, "anticlimactic".
5, tiger head and mouse tail
Pinyin: hǔshǔ
Description: The head is as big as a tiger and the tail is as thin as a mouse. Metaphor means doing things with great momentum at first, then with little momentum and no end.
Source: Xie Ming Zhen's "Four-character Poems": "Rhyme has no good ending, which is called a tiger's head and a mouse's tail."