What do you mean, old horse squatting?

Riding an old horse on a horse is an idiom in Chinese, which comes from Cao Wei's "Although the turtle is old, it has walked out of Xiamen" in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms. ? [ 1]?

This idiom refers to an old horse. Even if it lies beside the manger, its heart yearns for a gallop of thousands of miles a day, which means that although people are old, they still maintain their ambitious and indomitable fighting spirit. Its own structure is subject-predicate structure, which can be used as predicate, attribute, object and clause, including praise. ? [ 1-2]?

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Idioms with the word "Fu"

*** 105 entry? 1475 reading

Fishing, squatting and pulling

Fishing arm, an idiom in China, pinyin is diào fúdéw?n, which means the practice of intercepting stereotyped writing; Interception questions are generally divided into upper and lower paragraphs; Fishing out the lower incision from the upper incision; Fishing is called fishing, and the lower cut is still in the upper cut. Grasping the upper and lower cuts, driving from the middle, and then transitioning from the upper cut to the lower cut, this is called crossing; Pull from the next section to the previous section, and then drop the text, which is called pulling; These three brushstrokes are the foreshadowing of deformation. From "please abolish the stereotyped writing examination method and try to use strategy to discuss the discount"

A shy way

The fox lurks behind the mouse. The China idiom, pinyin is hú qián shǔ fú, which means hiding like a fox and a mouse. Describe the appearance of timidity and hiding. From "Flying Pills, Romantic Mansions".

Rise in succession

China idiom, pinyin is cǐ fú bǐ qǐ, which means going up here and down there. Describe an inheritance. From The Grave: On Feuerbach Should Go Slow.

Sometimes arrogant, sometimes hidden.

China idiom, pinyin for chēzhāngshǔfú, means that the metaphor is sometimes arrogant and sometimes obscure, which comes from Preface of Guizhou Tusi in Ming History.

Idioms with the word "Ji"

***43 entries? 164 1 reading

Let the horse catch the mouse.

Let the horse catch the mouse, an idiom in China, pinyin is Li ? j b sh, which means to appoint a talented person to undertake a job that he is not competent for. From Shang Lu's "xianggong book" by Don Li Guan.

Cut off a horse from a hundred horses.

Hundreds of horses attack one horse, an idiom in China. The pinyin is B M M M F σ J σ, which means that many horses besiege a good horse. From Guanzi Bayan.

Follow the footsteps of others

Attached is the idiom of Ma Denghong and China, which means to become famous by attaching to others.

Support from boats and horses

China's idiom is Chuán jìzhütu, which means someone who can be trusted and reused. It comes from Lv Chunqiu in Du Zhi.

Idioms with the word "Lao"

***3 19 entry? 1.8 million reading

Even older women can understand.

Being able to interpret old thoughts (Pinyin: l m: o y ù né ng ji ě) is an idiom derived from historical stories, and the related allusions of idioms come from Hui Hong's "Cold Zhai Night Talk", Volume 1. The original meaning of "the old woman can understand" is that every time Bai Juyi writes a poem, she has to read it, and if she understands it, she will include it, and if she doesn't understand it, she will revise it. Later, it was used to describe words that are easy to understand; You can be a predicate and an attribute in a sentence.

Learn from the old and the poor

This is a China idiom. Pinyin means sh and l m?o mín k?n, which means that the soldiers are exhausted and the people are miserable after years of war. From the New Five Dynasties History Pinghua Jin History Volume II.

Restore youth and live forever.

Still old, China idiom, pinyin is Hu á n niá n què l m: o m o, which means no matter how young you are, you will live forever. Court letters from Song Yan Yan Zhi in the Southern Dynasties.

Learning is getting old.

An old scholar, China idiom, pinyin Qí rú shuò lo, which means an old and virtuous Confucian. From the drama Qin Meixin.

Idioms with the word "Jian"

***3 entries? 983 reading

An old horse lurks, aiming at a thousand miles-an old hero, aiming at a thousand miles.

Riding an old horse on a horse is an idiom in Chinese, which comes from Cao Wei's "Although the turtle is old, it has walked out of Xiamen" in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms. This idiom refers to an old horse. Even if it lies beside the manger, its heart yearns for a gallop of thousands of miles a day, which means that although people are old, they still maintain their ambitious and indomitable fighting spirit. Its own structure is subject-predicate structure, which can be used as predicate, attribute, object and clause, including praise.

Ambitious, ambitious

This is a China idiom. Pinyin is shén jì chū lì ū, which means ambitious, ambitious. Biographies of three founding heroes in Italy.

Catch up with the wind

Chasing the wind in Shang Dynasty is a Chinese idiom, which reads like Lu Shang and so on.

Idiom describing old age and strong body.

***5 entries? 87 thousand reading

Don't say that Sang Yu is late, because it's still foggy.

"Don't say it's late in Sang Yu, it's still full of clouds for the sky" is a poem by China, which is a metaphor for good health, vigor and initiative.

As we grow older, our beliefs become more firm.

Old and strong, a China idiom, the pinyin is l m: o é r mí ji ā n, which means that people are old, but they are more determined. From the item "chronological order of Dangkou".

An old horse lurks, aiming at a thousand miles-an old hero, aiming at a thousand miles.

Riding an old horse on a horse is an idiom in Chinese, which comes from Cao Wei's "Although the turtle is old, it has walked out of Xiamen" in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms. This idiom refers to an old horse. Even if it lies beside the manger, its heart yearns for a gallop of thousands of miles a day, which means that although people are old, they still maintain their ambitious and indomitable fighting spirit. Its own structure is subject-predicate structure, which can be used as predicate, attribute, object and clause, including praise.

Being old and strong and body

The body work, a China idiom, is spelled b m: o d ā o w è i l m: o, which describes that people are still strong in old age without losing their glory. From Romance of the Three Kingdoms.

Riding an old horse on a horse is an idiom in Chinese, which comes from Cao Wei's "Although the turtle is old, it has walked out of Xiamen" in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms. ? [ 1]?

This idiom refers to an old horse. Even if it lies beside the manger, its heart yearns for a gallop of thousands of miles a day, which means that although people are old, they still maintain their ambitious and indomitable fighting spirit. Its own structure is subject-predicate structure, which can be used as predicate, attribute, object and clause, including praise. ? [ 1-2]?

See more encyclopedia star maps.

Idioms with the word "Fu"

*** 105 entry? 1475 reading

Fishing, squatting and pulling

Fishing arm, an idiom in China, pinyin is diào fúdéw?n, which means the practice of intercepting stereotyped writing; Interception questions are generally divided into upper and lower paragraphs; Fishing out the lower incision from the upper incision; Fishing is called fishing, and the lower cut is still in the upper cut. Grasping the upper and lower cuts, driving from the middle, and then transitioning from the upper cut to the lower cut, this is called crossing; Pull from the next section to the previous section, and then drop the text, which is called pulling; These three brushstrokes are the foreshadowing of deformation. From "please abolish the stereotyped writing examination method and try to use strategy to discuss the discount"

A shy way

The fox lurks behind the mouse. The China idiom, pinyin is hú qián shǔ fú, which means hiding like a fox and a mouse. Describe the appearance of timidity and hiding. From "Flying Pills, Romantic Mansions".

Rise in succession

China idiom, pinyin is cǐ fú bǐ qǐ, which means going up here and down there. Describe an inheritance. From The Grave: On Feuerbach Should Go Slow.

Sometimes arrogant, sometimes hidden.

China idiom, pinyin for chēzhāngshǔfú, means that the metaphor is sometimes arrogant and sometimes obscure, which comes from Preface of Guizhou Tusi in Ming History.

Idioms with the word "Ji"

***43 entries? 164 1 reading

Let the horse catch the mouse.

Let the horse catch the mouse, an idiom in China, pinyin is Li ? j b sh, which means to appoint a talented person to undertake a job that he is not competent for. From Shang Lu's "xianggong book" by Don Li Guan.

Cut off a horse from a hundred horses.

Hundreds of horses attack one horse, an idiom in China. The pinyin is B M M M F σ J σ, which means that many horses besiege a good horse. From Guanzi Bayan.

Follow the footsteps of others

Attached is the idiom of Ma Denghong and China, which means to become famous by attaching to others.

Support from boats and horses

China's idiom is Chuán jìzhütu, which means someone who can be trusted and reused. It comes from Lv Chunqiu in Du Zhi.

Idioms with the word "Lao"

***3 19 entry? 1.8 million reading

Even older women can understand.

Being able to interpret old thoughts (Pinyin: l m: o y ù né ng ji ě) is an idiom derived from historical stories, and the related allusions of idioms come from Hui Hong's "Cold Zhai Night Talk", Volume 1. The original meaning of "the old woman can understand" is that every time Bai Juyi writes a poem, she has to read it, and if she understands it, she will include it, and if she doesn't understand it, she will revise it. Later, it was used to describe words that are easy to understand; You can be a predicate and an attribute in a sentence.

Learn from the old and the poor

This is a China idiom. Pinyin means sh and l m?o mín k?n, which means that the soldiers are exhausted and the people are miserable after years of war. From the New Five Dynasties History Pinghua Jin History Volume II.

Restore youth and live forever.

Still old, China idiom, pinyin is Hu á n niá n què l m: o m o, which means no matter how young you are, you will live forever. Court letters from Song Yan Yan Zhi in the Southern Dynasties.

Learning is getting old.

An old scholar, China idiom, pinyin Qí rú shuò lo, which means an old and virtuous Confucian. From the drama Qin Meixin.

Idioms with the word "Jian"

***3 entries? 983 reading

An old horse lurks, aiming at a thousand miles-an old hero, aiming at a thousand miles.

Riding an old horse on a horse is an idiom in Chinese, which comes from Cao Wei's "Although the turtle is old, it has walked out of Xiamen" in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms. This idiom refers to an old horse. Even if it lies beside the manger, its heart yearns for a gallop of thousands of miles a day, which means that although people are old, they still maintain their ambitious and indomitable fighting spirit. Its own structure is subject-predicate structure, which can be used as predicate, attribute, object and clause, including praise.

Ambitious, ambitious

This is a China idiom. Pinyin is shén jì chū lì ū, which means ambitious and ambitious. Biographies of three founding heroes in Italy.

Catch up with the wind

Chasing the wind in Shang Dynasty is a Chinese idiom, which reads like Lu Shang and so on.

An idiom to describe being old and strong.

***5 entries? 87 thousand reading

Don't say that Sang Yu is late, because it's still foggy.

"Don't say it's late in Sang Yu, it's still full of clouds for the sky" is a poem by China, which is a metaphor for good health, vigor and initiative.

As we grow older, our beliefs become more firm.

Old and strong, a China idiom, the pinyin is l m: o é r mí ji ā n, which means that people are old, but they are more determined. From the item "chronological order of Dangkou".

An old horse lurks, aiming at a thousand miles-an old hero, aiming at a thousand miles.

Riding an old horse on a horse is an idiom in Chinese, which comes from Cao Wei's "Although the turtle is old, it has walked out of Xiamen" in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms. This idiom refers to an old horse. Even if it lies beside the manger, its heart yearns for a gallop of thousands of miles a day, which means that although people are old, they still maintain their ambitious and indomitable fighting spirit. Its own structure is subject-predicate structure, which can be used as predicate, attribute, object and clause, including praise.

Being old and strong and body

The body work, a China idiom, is spelled b m: o d ā o w è i l m: o, which describes that people are still strong in old age without losing their glory. From Romance of the Three Kingdoms.