1. The four-character idiom for treating weight loss correctly
Go from house to house, without missing a beat.
Next to each other, in order, in order. Get in the way and prevent others from doing their jobs.
I felt angry and depressed in my heart. Aotou Aonao describes someone who is stubborn and unruly.
A hundred hits refers to being able to shoot an arrow or shoot a gun accurately and hit the target every time. It also means having full confidence in doing things.
Baidu Baiquan can accomplish the task every time he takes action. It describes that everything can be done with ease and good results can be achieved. Bai Ling Bai Li is a person who is very smart and well-behaved.
Be obedient and obey everything. Describes everything as being obedient to others.
A hundred clothes and a hundred things will comply with everything. Describes everything as being obedient to others.
Victory in every battle. Describe being invincible.
The half-green and half-yellow crops have not grown yet, and green and yellow are intersecting. The metaphor is not ripe yet.
Half push and half push: resist, dodge; just: move closer, welcome. While declining, he moved closer.
Describe the way of putting on airs and pretending to decline. Hemming and hawing describes speech that is vague and not straightforward.
Half convinced, a little convinced, and a little doubtful. It means that you are not sure about the truth or falsehood.
Contrary in and out of disobedience: violation, randomness. Property obtained through unfair means will also be taken away by others through unfair means.
The money gained indiscriminately was spent indiscriminately. You must be respectful and respectful: dignified and polite.
Describes a very respectful attitude. Respectfully describes a very respectful attitude.
Divination by night and day: divination. Describes endless feasting day and night.
Divination by day and night: divination. Describes endless feasting day and night.
Neither humble nor arrogant: low and inferior; arrogant: arrogant. It means to treat people appropriately, without being arrogant or arrogant.
If you don’t have tea or rice, you won’t think about food. Describes being worried.
A person who is neither stupid nor deaf is neither stupid nor deaf. It is often used together with "Unable to be an uncle", which means that if one does not pretend to be stupid or deaf-mute, one cannot be a grandma or grandpa.
To describe elders, be magnanimous. Don't look at it, don't pay attention, don't look at it, don't answer it.
不悱不发悂: What you want to say in your heart but cannot say it out. Fa: Inspire.
Refers to not inspiring students when they want to say something but cannot say it. This is the teaching method of Confucius.
Not angry but not angry: I want to understand but still don’t understand. Kai: Inspiration.
It means not to inspire students when they want to understand but have not yet understood. This is the teaching method of Confucius.
If it is not abundant, it will not kill. Feng: thick; kill: reduce. Neither extravagant nor frugal.
Neither increase nor decrease. Not embarrassed or awkward means that you are in a dilemma and it is difficult to deal with it.
It also describes the appearance as awkward. Neither ancient nor modern means that things are abnormal and have never happened in ancient times or modern times.
It was originally meant to ridicule people who learn nothing but pretend to be weird. Often used as a metaphor for compromise.
Regardless, it means not taking care of others. It also means acting recklessly and not caring about others. Don’t hum, don’t laugh, don’t speak. Don’t say what you should say.
Bujibuli means: close, approach; Li: distance, leave. Refers to being neither close nor distant from a person.
It mostly refers to the relationship between people who are close but not close, or distant but not distant. Not fast or slow: rapid.
Xu: Slowly. Take your time.
Refers to being able to handle things at a moderate pace, not too fast or too slow. If you don’t harvest crops, you won’t harvest crops. Categories: sowing seeds; crops harvesting grains.
Generally refers to not participating in agricultural production labor. Not arrogant, not arrogant, not arrogant, not impatient.
Neither the present nor the past means that things are abnormal, which has never happened in ancient times or modern times. It was originally meant to ridicule people who have learned nothing but pretend to be weird.
It is often used as a metaphor for compromise. Not to be cautious, not to be jealous, to be boastful and arrogant.
Don’t boast about yourself, don’t brag about yourself. Describe humility.
Neither arrogant nor humble: arrogant; humble: low, low self-esteem. It means to treat people appropriately, without being arrogant or arrogant.
Worthy of shame, shameful: ashamed. Be upright and have a clear conscience.
Bulangbuxiu originally means neither high nor low. The metaphor is ultimately useless.
No grain, no grain: pennisetum; grain: foxtail grass. This refers to the absence of weeds among the seedlings.
The latter is a metaphor for people who are not talented and have no future. Neither fish nor fowl: not of the same kind.
It is neither this category nor that category, and it may not make sense to describe it in a superficial way. It neither spreads nor branches.
It is a metaphor for speaking or writing articles concisely and to the point without being sloppy. Unclear means speaking vaguely and very unclearly.
Also describes ambiguous behavior. Neutral. Don't take sides.
Unbiased: biased. Not taking sides.
Indicates neutrality or impartiality. If you don’t destroy the old, you can’t build the new.
Unyielding: to yield; to bend: to bend. It is a metaphor for not giving in under pressure and being very tenacious.
Not counting the sun and the moon means not counting the sun and the moon, and there is no time limit. Not three or four means not decent, but also means not decent.
Not wearing a shirt or wearing a shirt: top; shoes: shoes. *** Kaftan, *** Shoes.
Describe the slovenly appearance. Can't go up, can't go down, can't go up, can't come down.
Describe a dilemma. There is a Buddhist saying that there is no birth or death, and it is believed that Buddhism has no changes in birth and death, which is a different name for "eternal".
If you don’t know, you don’t know much. The old metaphor is simple folk customs.
To live or die means to be lifeless or in an embarrassing situation. The absence of pain or itch is neither pain nor itch.
The original description is an indescribable discomfort. Many metaphors do not touch the essence, do not hit the point, and do not solve the problem.
"Neither spit nor ru" describes a person who is upright and upright, not bullying the weak and afraid of the strong. Don't listen, don't ask: listen.
He doesn’t listen to what others say, and he doesn’t take the initiative to ask. Describes not caring about things.
Be neither civilized nor martial. You can neither be civilized nor martial. Not Xu Buji Xu: slow.
Disease: fast. Not fast, not slow, calm and natural.
Persistent and unyielding is used to describe someone who insists on persisting until the request is met. Bu Yi Bu Hui Yi: refers to Boyi; Hui: refers to Liuxia Hui.
If you don’t do Boyi, you won’t learn from Liu Xiahui. The metaphor is eclectic without being extreme.
Neither yin nor yang means that the attitude is unclear and ambiguous. No discount, no discount: When selling goods, the percentage is deducted from the list price.
No discount, meaning complete and complete. Unknowingly: knowing; aware: aware.
Not aware, not aware. There are many fingers and no attention has been paid.
Buyu Buqiu: jealousy; Qiu: greedy. It means not jealous, not greedy.
Thoroughly and thoroughly: thorough. Through up and down.
Thoroughly: thorough, thorough. From beginning to end, everything, completely meaningful.
To be king: to be the king; to be the leader of the ancient alliance of princes. It is a metaphor for relying on power to run rampant, or arrogantly claiming to be the leader.
To achieve oneself and achieve something, one must also achieve something outside of oneself. Sincerity describes being very sincere and sincere.
Sincerely: Really, truly; Anxiety: Fear; Fear: Fear. Extremely cautious to the point of fear and insecurity.
Taking advantage of the time and momentum used to mean that people should take advantage of opportunities and current trends to do something. The bow of Chu was lost by the people of Chu, but it was still the people of Chu who found it.
It is a metaphor for someone who finds something even though he has lost it. 2. Four-character idioms that express thinness
If you are too fat, choose thin: What is the details of choosing between fat and thin?
What is the ambition of tiger and thin: It is a metaphor for people who are poor but have endless ambitions?
Eat fat and lose weight: a metaphor for doing things that take advantage of?
Yan is thin and ring is fat: Yan: Zhao Feiyan, the empress of Emperor Cheng of the Han Dynasty; Huan: Yang Yuhuan, the imperial concubine of Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty. It describes women who have different body shapes and are good at their own beauty, and women who have different styles and have their own strengths. Details?
SKINNY LINGDING: Describes the skinny appearance of a person or animal. Also known as "skinny and lonely". Details?
Skinny: describes a person or animal that is emaciated and exposed.
Details?
The thinner and the fatter Qin: a metaphor for pain and itch that has nothing to do with oneself. Details?
The fat brother is thin: the old metaphor is that brothers love each other and fight to the death in the face of difficulties. Details?
Picking and choosing: a metaphor for picking and choosing; only wanting what is beneficial to oneself. Fat: fat meat; thin: lean meat. Details?
The horse is thin and has long hair: It is a metaphor for people who are in poverty and will appear to be in low spirits. Details?
Mian: face; muscle: muscle; refers to the body. Complexion becomes yellow; body becomes thin. Describes the appearance of a person who is chronically ill, weak or malnourished. Details?
Skinny: as thin as a stick. Described as very thin. Details?
Yellow face and thin body: Yellow face and thin body. Describes the appearance of being malnourished or sick in detail?
Skinny bones: So thin that even the bones are exposed. Describes being very emaciated.
Skinny and lonely: Describes a person who is thin and lonely. What does it look like in detail?
The Yue is thinner and the Wu is fatter: It doesn’t matter if the Yue people are thin or the Wu people are fat. It is a metaphor for pain and itching that has nothing to do with oneself?
Huangganheishan: refers to the haggard appearance of a person?
Huangpiguashou: describes the appearance of a sallow face and thin muscles?
< p> Yellow skin and thin skin: Describe the appearance of a yellow complexion and thin body in detail?Skinny as firewood: withered: withered. Describe being very thin. Details?
To draw more to make up for less, to draw fat to make up for thinness: to draw: to extract; to supplement: to subsidize. Refers to the extraction of excess supplements and insufficient details?
Red thin green manure: lush green leaves and withered red flowers. Describe the scenery of late spring in detail?
Thin leaves and broken flowers: a metaphor for the aging of women. Details?
Dr. Shouyang: refers to a person who can control himself and others. Details?
Skinny: very skinny. Details?
Skinny: describes a person or animal that is emaciated and exposed. Details?
Skinny bones: Describes a person or animal that is emaciated and exposed. Details?
Leaner and fatter: relatively fat and thin. Metaphor for commenting on appearance. Details?
Skinny: Describes extreme thinness. Details?
Skinny as a jackal: See "skinny as a stick". Details?
Fat Winter and Thin Year: The custom of Wudi in the Southern Song Dynasty is to have multiple winter solstice and skip New Year's Day. During the winter solstice, families send each other festive gifts, which is known as "Fat Winter and Thin Year". See "Leo Yin Ji Tan" by Anonymous Song Dynasty, Song Dynasty. Details?
Green fertilizer, red and thin: green: refers to leaves; red: refers to flowers; fat: grows vigorously; thin: withers. The vegetation is lush with green leaves but the flowers are withered and sparse. Describe the scenery of late spring. Details?
Skinny: skeleton: body. Describe an old and thin body. Details?
Skinny boy Leima: Lei: thin. Frail children, skinny horses. Metaphor of weak and detailed?
Bamboo clear and pine thin: Describes a person's appearance thin and spirited in detail?
Jiao Handao thin: Originally refers to the simple and solitary poems of Meng Jiao and Jia Dao. style. Later it was used to describe similar artistic conceptions in poems. Details?
Hu Fei Zhong Shou: Hu: Hu Zhao during the Three Kingdoms period; Zhong: Zhong Yao during the Three Kingdoms period. Hu Zhao's font is fat, while Zhong Yao's font is thin. Each person is good at describing calligraphy in its own way. Details?
Huanfeiyanshou: Huan: Yang Yuhuan, the imperial concubine of Emperor Xuanzong of Tang Dynasty; Yan: Zhao Feiyan, empress of Emperor Cheng of Han Dynasty. Describes women's different body shapes and each has its own charm. It is also a metaphor for the style and genre of works of art. Details?
Dao Shou Jiao Han: The poetry styles of Jia Dao and Meng Jiao in the Tang Dynasty are mostly clear and miserable. 3. A four-character word that describes a person who is very thin
Pinyin: gǔ shòu rú chái Definition: extremely thin.
Source: Song Dynasty Lu Dian's "Piya·Shi Beast": "As thin as a jackal. Jackal, firewood.
Jackal's body is thin, so it is called jackal." Example: Grandma Liu looked at Sister Feng~, her expression was in a daze, and she felt miserable in her heart.
Chapter 113 of "A Dream of Red Mansions" by Cao Xueqin of the Qing Dynasty Synonyms: thin and dry, skinny as a jackal Antonyms: fat head and big ears, full brain and fat intestines Grammar: used as predicate, attributive, complement; to describe extremely thin and skinny people Jackal Pinyin: gǔ shòu rú chái Explanation: Describes extreme thinness. Same as "skinny".
Source: "Piya Shi Beast": "Also said: thin as a jackal. Jackal, firewood.
The body of jackal is thin, so it is called jackal." Example: Teng bites and looks at that chapter~.
Extremely thin. Source: Qing dynasty Shen Fu's "Six Chapters of a Floating Life: Ups and Downs and Sorrows": "Yun Yun finally resented being fooled. She developed severe blood diseases, her bed mats were torn apart, her knives and guiels were ineffective, and her bones were emaciated and thin."
Example: Chapter 89 of "The Wizard of Oz" by Li Baichuan of the Qing Dynasty: "The children have been fascinated by it these days, ~." Synonyms: skinny Grammar: used as predicate, attributive, and adverbial; to describe extremely thin Pinyin: miàn huáng jī shòu Definition: sallow complexion and thin body.
Describes the appearance of a person who is malnourished or sick. Source: The first chapter of "One-Horned Ox" by Yuan·Anonymous: "Brother, you are so sallow and skinny, how can you be a winner."
Example: Find a small room behind the kitchen , I saw several old monks sitting on the ground, one by one~. Chapter 6 of "Water Margin" by Shi Naian of the Ming Dynasty Synonyms: There are dishes on the face Antonyms: Radiant Grammar: Used as predicate, attributive, complement; to describe a person's face is not good and skinny Pinyin: shòu gǔ lín lín Explanation: to describe a person Or animals become emaciated and exposed.
Source: The title of the first volume of Liu Qing's "History of Entrepreneurship": "Two long, bony hands affectionately caressed the head of Bao Wa, who stood in front of her and never left her mother. "Example: Our poor, little Shen Asi, just for three coppers, took off his shabby coat, exposed his ribs and fibula, and jumped into the Huangpu River with a 'plop'.
Hu Wanchun's "The Man Who Grows by the Huangpu River" Synonyms: skinny, skinny Grammar: used as predicate, attributive; refers to very thin and skinny Pinyin: shòu gǔ lín xún Explanation: to describe a person or animal that is emaciated and exposed . Source: Chapter 18 of "Spring and Autumn in a Small Town" by Gao Yunlan: "Xiu Wei saw a bare-chested, skinny child laborer, carrying a dustpan of mud, walking with difficulty on a suspended springboard."
Example: This time, the howling of this black dog actually made the haggard old horse prick up its ears. "Various Colors" by Wang Meng Synonyms: skinny, skinny Antonyms: fat and strong Grammar: used as predicate, attributive; refers to very thin skinny Pinyin: shòu gǔ léng léng Explanation: so thin that even the bones are exposed , describing being very thin.
Source: Part 1 of "The Storm" by Zhou Libo: "The people in his house are all skinny and skeletal. They are worried about rice, firewood and salt all day long." Synonyms: skinny, skinny Grammar: used as predicate and attributive; refers to being very thin and skinny Pinyin: shòu gǔ líng dīng Explanation: Describes the skinny appearance of a person or animal.
Also called "skinny and lonely". Source: Chapter 26 of "Spring and Autumn in a Small Town" by Gao Yunlan: "This cell is larger and brighter. There is a skinny old man in it."
Example: Especially those who are very kind. , and add ~; it seems like you will fall down if you blow on it, so it is impossible to do it. "Night" by Ye Shengtao Synonyms: thin and boneless Antonyms: fat and strong Grammar: used as predicate, adverbial, attributive; refers to thin and lonely thin and boneless Pinyin: shòu gǔ líng dīng Explanation: Describes the appearance of a thin and lonely person.
Source: "Selected Chinese Folktales: The Master and the Servant": "The shepherd saw the cows being so skinny and solitary, and was very angry." Synonyms: skinny and lonely Antonyms: fat and strong Grammar: predicate, Adverbial, attributive; refers to being thin and lonely.
4. A four-character idiom that means very thin
Aoshuangduxue (jumei)
Graceful and luxurious (peony)
Xiangyuan Yiqing (lotus)
Floating subtle fragrance (plum blossoms)
Sparse shadows (plum blossoms)
Clusters of flowers
Blossoming branches
Colorful
Thousands of purples and reds
Let a hundred flowers bloom
Strive for beauty
Be alluring
Colorful
< p> GracefulDelicate and charming
Ready to bloom
Beautiful and fragrant
Colorful and colorful
Colorful< /p>
Strange flowers and exotic herbs
Attracting bees and butterflies
In full swing
Slim and graceful
Short-lived in the pan
< p> Flowers vying for beautyFlowers vying for beauty
Colorful flowers
Colorful flowers
Green, fat, red and thin
Clusters of flowers
Blooming flowers
Colorful
Colorful fallen flowers
Fragrant
Buds ready to bloom
A flash in the pan 5. Four-letter words that express obesity
Extremely fat; big shoulders and round waist; huge back and waist; full of flesh on the face
Potbellied: obese. Describe the appearance of obesity.
Fat head and big ears. A fat head with two big ears. Describes a fat body, and sometimes refers to a cute child.
Naomanchuangfa Naoman: refers to a fat head and big ears; intestinal fat: refers to a fat body and a big belly. Describes the fat and ugly image of exploiters who have been eating all day long.
Poop on an empty stomach: Fat appearance. There is no real talent in metaphor.
Intestinal fat and brain fullness Intestinal fat refers to fat body and big belly; Naoman: refers to fat head and big ears. It describes people who eat without working to be full and fat.
Potbelly: Fat appearance. Describe the appearance of obesity.