The poems about what to practice are: what Hu Maxiang practices, and what the public gains. The structure is: practice (left and right structure) casually (left and right structure). The pinyin is: jiàn róu u. The phonetic notation is: ㄐㄢㄖㄡ _.
How to explain it specifically? We will introduce you through the following aspects:
I. Text Description Click here to view the details of the plan.
1. Also called "practice _". 2. trample; Ravage.
Second, the citation interpretation
1. Also called "practice _". Trample; Ravage. Quote "Biography of Li Mi in the Book of the New Tang Dynasty": "Those who eat well in Luocang will not be given inspection, and they will not be able to win, so they will practice wolves by means of Tao." Song Luyou's "The Jiji Temple Monument of Baoen Guangxiao Temple in Taizhou": "Practice burning and washing the ground." Zhang Ming Huang Yan's poem "Mr. Wan Da Wu Boluan _" says: "A palm of the river and mountain will also be destroyed, and the old minister will be ruined." "Fighting Thieves" by Ye Jin in Qingjiang: "Hezhou is in danger of Lanzhou, and the suburbs of Ma Rong are shocked."
Third, online interpretation
Practice what? Chinese vocabulary. Pinyin: jiànróu Interpretation: trample; tread on
Idioms about what to practice.
Don't be notorious, money is despised, and people are ignorant and childless.
About practicing anything.
Mo Yan doesn't practice, practice, practice soil, eat wool, cattle and sheep, despise others, practice ink, take the road of enemies, have no children and no names, and trample on each other.
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