Stone sinking into the sea _ Kingsoft iciba
Spelling:
Hitchin dahai
Explanation:
The stone sank to the bottom of the sea.
Go out:
Bird Bao Guo's "Luo Li Lang makes a scene in Suoguo Temple": "No one knows when you go out; Like a stone sinking into the sea; Iron falling Jiang Tao; Pennisetum has no roots; Broken kite. "
Example:
He has to hand in two or three drafts every month; But always ~; There is no result. &; ^^&; Some opinions put forward by our group are like ~; Can't get any reply.
2. Guess the pattern of the sea in the idiom. The answer is that accumulated soil is a mountain, accumulated water is a sea, accumulated soil can be piled up into mountains, and stored water can form a sea. Metaphor makes a mickle.
A sea boiling and a mountain shaking is a metaphor for great momentum or strength. The same as "sea boiling mountain cracking".
Love is evil: sin. Great desire, the abyss of sin. Always refers to men and women who are deeply immersed in boundless love.
Finding snapper by warning: a spoon made of shells. Measure the sea with shells. Metaphor observation and understanding is narrow and one-sided.
Dry bottom: Dry bottom After the dry bottom, you can finally see the bottom of the sea, but it's not easy. Used to describe people's unpredictability.
Delicious seafood: refers to all kinds of seafood. All kinds of precious foods produced in Shan Ye and the sea. Generally refers to rich dishes.
Hongqun Opera Haihong: Hongyan; Sea: refers to the Great Lakes. Like many Hong Fei games in the Great Lakes. Describe the vigorous and flexible calligraphy.
Su Hai in Han Dynasty refers to the magnificent articles written by Han Yu in Tang Dynasty and Su Shi in Song Dynasty.
Guanhai Storm Guanhai: Old refers to officialdom. The old word refers to the ups and downs of officialdom, like stormy waves in the ocean, which are unpredictable; It also refers to the risks and twists and turns in officialdom.
Swear eternal love. Swear to the mountains and seas. It is said that men and women love each other and are steadfast.
Han Hai Su Chao refers to the magnificent articles written by Han Yu in Tang Dynasty and Su Shi in Song Dynasty.
Su Han Hai Chao refers to the magnificent articles written by Han Yu in Tang Dynasty and Su Shi in Song Dynasty.
Go back to mountains and seas. The metaphor is powerful.
Waves are a metaphor for great power or strength. It is the same as "boiling over the river".
Throw mountains into the sea, mountains and seas, desolate and remote places. Exiled to a desolate and remote place because of his guilt.
The sea is boring, the mountains are sad and the sea is painful. Describe the gloomy clouds as big as Xiangshan and as deep as the sea, which cannot be sent away.
A boiling river is a metaphor for great power or strength. It is the same as "boiling over the river".
The sea boiled and the mountains split. The sea boiled and the rocks broke. A metaphor for great momentum or strength. Also known as "sea boiling mountain shaking".
The river is boiling on the sea. Describe the great potential of water. It is often used as a metaphor for strength or momentum.
Worrying about mountains and seas is like mountains, and worrying about the sea is like the sea. Describe the gloomy clouds as big as Xiangshan and as deep as the sea, which cannot be sent away.
3. Look at the picture and guess the idiom: a four-character, a sea character and a key. All rivers run into the sea. B h: i'm chu ā n gu and H: I.
[Interpretation] Hundred Rivers: refers to large and small rivers. All rivers will eventually flow into the sea. Metaphor is popular or the general trend. It also means that many things are scattered and gathered in one place.
[Language] "Huainan Pan Zi Lun Xun": "Hundreds of rivers come from different sources; But they all belong to the sea; A hundred schools of thought contend and are committed to governance. "
[Pronunciation] Sichuan; It can't be pronounced "cuān".
[Shape discrimination] Sichuan; Can't write "state"
The general trend, the general trend.
[Antonym] Separate and alienate from others.
[Usage] Now it is a metaphor for people's wishes.
Subject-predicate type
[example]
(1) Many young students in China; Such as ~; Apply to work in the hardest place in the motherland.
② People in Taiwan Province Province and the mainland yearn for reunification; Such as ~; No one can stop it.
Everything tends in one direction.
4. What are the idioms with sea characters? Guess the idiom 1 crossing the sea with the Eight Immortals.
Idiom pinyin: bā xi ā n guò h m: i.
Interpretation of idioms: According to legend, when the Eight Immortals crossed the sea, they didn't need a boat, and each had a set of spells. Later, I said that each has its own skills or methods and competes with each other.
The origin of the idiom: The Eight Immortals Crossing the Sea, which is anonymous in Ming Dynasty, is the second fold: "Then the Eight Immortals crossing the sea have great magical powers, which shows that these saints are strong enough to return to the mountains and their names will last forever."
Step 2 pile up mountains and accumulate seas
Idioms pinyin: du and sh ā n j and hm: i.
Idiom explanation: There are many things described.
The origin of the idiom: It can be traced back to Cao Xueqin's Dream of Red Mansions 16 in the Qing Dynasty: "Don't say that money has become dung, just because there are things in the world, and there is nothing but mountains and seas."
3. Navigation ladder mountain
Idiom pinyin: há ng h m: I t: sh ā n
Idiom definition: crossing the sea and climbing mountains. Refers to a difficult journey.
Origin of idioms: Preface to Ode to Dafa by Emperor Liang Jianwen of the Southern Dynasties: "Sail up the mountain and offer a white ring."
4, the vast sea of suffering
Idiom pinyin: má ng má ngk ǔ hü i ǔ i.
Idiom definition: Buddhist language, vast and far-reaching appearance. Metaphor is endless suffering
Origin of Idiom: Qing Pu Songling's Strange Tales from a Lonely Studio Ma: "Children are deeply in love, and heroes are short of breath." Qing Dan Minglun commented: "Children are affectionate, heroes are short of breath, and they are in the same boat."
5. Make a vow of eternal love
Idiom pinyin: méng shān sh ch m:I: i.
Idiom definition: To make a vow to the mountain and the sea means that men and women love each other unswervingly.
The idiom comes from Wang Yuan's master Siyupian: "If he is ungrateful to find a sin, I will make this oath clear."