What does imitation mean?

Imitation refers to taking something as an example, doing it through imitation, or using it as a reference to develop. ?

Pinyin xià o f m: ng

source

1, the "hard iron" of modern Liu Qing: "It is not the accumulation of every family member that is worthy of emulation by the whole society."

2. Xie Ming Zhao Zhe's "Five Miscellaneous People Part III": "Country songs have been used as slogans so far, but some people have followed suit."

Interpretation of the vernacular: Up to now, the villagers all think that this is the information people talk about, but there is no such person who learns from each other.

Extended data

Synonym of imitation

1, imitating [mó f m: ng]

Interpretation: Learn to do it in a ready-made way.

Source: Song Ouyang Xiu's "Learning Books as a Family": "Learning books should be self-contained, and those who imitate others are called slave books."

Interpretation of vernacular Chinese: When learning calligraphy, we should develop into an independent family. Those who copy all kinds of inscriptions or imitate others can say that they have no unique calligraphy style.

2. follow the example of [little f m]?

Interpretation: Do as others do; Learn from others' strengths.

Source: The Book of Changes, an anonymous book in the pre-Qin period: "Imaging is dry, imitating Kun." ?

Vernacular interpretation: generating an image is called. The one who imitates dryness and completes the image is Kun.

3. Imitate [f m: ng xi ao]

Interpretation: imitate others' methods, styles, etc.

Origin: Korea? "On Salt and Iron" does not pass: "People imitate each other, and the fields are getting worse."

Interpretation of vernacular: common people imitate each other, and the fields are barren day by day.

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