The four-character idiom of "Junshan"

1. What are the four-character idioms for army?

Thousands of troops,

Fighting alone,

Delaying military aircraft,

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Dog-headed military advisor,

General of the defeated army,

Military orders like mountains,

The whole army was annihilated,

Fighting alone,

Staying in Biye,

Hanging army goes deep,

A new army rises,

The army is defeated,

The three armies are shattered,

The three armies are the best,

The victorious general,

The general who leads the army,

< p> Sweeping thousands of armies,

Hu Cao joins the army,

Rewarding the three armies,

A new army emerges,

General Jingpan,

My wife is in the army,

Powerful to the three armies,

General Dashu,

The army is trained in martial arts,

Teasing Join the army,

Thousands of horses and troops,

General with a broken head,

General with a thousand victories,

Go deep alone 2. Four-character idioms about mountains Encyclopedia

Bashan Crossing - Ba: Climbing. Climb mountains and cross ridges. Describing someone who is good at mountain climbing and walking

Trekking through mountains and rivers - Ba: to tread; Shan: mountains; We: wade through water; Shui: big river. Climbing mountains and ridges, wading across rivers. Describe the pain of traveling

Baier Rivers and Mountains - Baier: Two against a hundred. It means that mountains and rivers are dangerous and solid, and two people can defeat a hundred people. Later it refers to a country with strong national power and stable border defenses

Baier Mountains and Rivers - Baier: Two against a hundred. Metaphor for a land with dangerous mountains and rivers

Forced to Liangshan - forced: forced; Liangshan: also known as Liangshanbo, in today's Shandong Province. A metaphor for being forced to rebel. It is also a metaphor for being forced to take some kind of action

Hiding in a famous mountain - hiding the work in a famous mountain and passing it on to like-minded people. Describe the work as extremely valuable

Chongshan and lofty mountains - Chong: high; Jun: high and steep mountains. Tall and steep mountains

Mountains and mountains - countless tall and steep mountains

Be sure of Mount Tai - as stable as Mount Tai. It is a metaphor for being absolutely sure, and there is no need to worry

Fan Shui imitates a mountain - a metaphor for imitating others

Setting a mountain on fire - a metaphor for fanning the flames and sowing dissension

Piling up like a mountain - Gathered in piles, like hills. Describing a lot of things

Mountains and seas - describing a lot of things

Sailing ladder mountains - crossing the sea and climbing mountains. Refers to going through a difficult journey

The command is like a mountain--the military command is serious and cannot be changed

The accumulation of soil can become a mountain--the accumulation of soil can be piled into a mountain, which is a metaphor for accumulating less to become more. 3. What kind of army What is the four-character idiom

1. The defeated general: The general who lost the battle. Nowadays it is mostly used to satirize people who fail.

2. Avoid the army: refers to giving in and avoiding. One house: thirty miles.

3. The remaining defeated generals: The remaining generals after the defeat. Same as "remnant soldiers and defeated generals".

4. Overturn the army and kill the general: Overturn: destroy. Destroy the army and kill the general.

5. Fight alone: ??Fight hard: Fight with all your strength. The isolated and helpless army fought alone against the enemy. It also refers to a person or a group working hard to engage in a certain struggle without support or help.

6. The isolated army penetrates deep into the enemy's combat zone.

7. Fighting alone: ??An isolated army fights alone. It is a metaphor for working alone without support.

8. If the army is broken, the general will be killed: ① If the army is broken, the general will be killed. Refers to the annihilation of the entire army. ② Defeat the enemy army and kill the enemy general.

9. Thousands of troops: Describes a majestic team or a huge momentum.

10. An army of thousands is easy to obtain, but a general is hard to find. A general is rare.

11. Total annihilation: The entire army is wiped out.

Metaphor that something completely failed.

12. Total annihilation: The entire army was wiped out. Metaphor that something completely failed.

13. Losing an army and losing a general: Still losing an army and losing a general. Soldiers and generals suffered losses. Refers to failure in battle.

14. Raise an army for a thousand days and use it for a while: refers to long-term support and training of the army in preparation for the time when it is used for war. Same as "Raise an army for a thousand days and use it for one day".

15. Raise an army for a thousand days and use it in one day: refers to long-term support and training of the army in preparation for the time when it is used for war.

16. It takes a thousand days to raise an army, but it is used in a moment: support and train the army in peacetime, so that it can be used to fight at the critical moment. It refers to accumulating strength at ordinary times and using it all at once when necessary.

17. A new army: Form a new army to create its own unique force. A metaphor for the sudden rise of new power. It also made a sudden appearance.

18. The sudden rise of a new army: Another army. It is a metaphor for the sudden emergence of a new force.

19. The habits of Youjun: Youjun: Wang Xizhi, a famous calligrapher in Jin Dynasty, once served as the general of Youjun and was known as King Youjun in the world. Metaphors blindly imitate the ancients and cannot create their own style.

20. Recruiting troops and buying horses: Still recruiting troops and buying horses.

21. Reorganizing the Army by Jingwu: Jing: Governance. Rectify the army and manage armaments. 4. Four-character idioms describing mountain peaks

1. Continuous

lián mián bù duàn

Idiom explanation: Continuous: continuous. Describes continuous; never interrupted.

The source of the idiom: Zhu Guozhen of the Ming Dynasty's "Yongzhuang Xiaoxiao": "In the past, I lost my wife again, four sons, another sister, and finally my mother, in an endless stream, crying and sad, and five hearts are tied."

2. Cliff

qiào bì xuán yá

Idiom explanation: cliff: a steep cliff; cliff: a high hanging cliff. Describing the precipitous mountains

The source of the idiom: Chapter 17 of Guo Xun's "The Legend of the Heroes" of the Ming Dynasty: "The steepest ones are the cliffs, and the winding ones are the rock flows and streams."

3. Straight into the sky

zhí rù yún xiāo

Explanation of the idiom: Yunxiao: refers to the sky. Soaring straight into the sky. Describing a singing voice that is high and loud

The source of the idiom: Chapter 34 of "The Scholars" by Wu Jingzi of the Qing Dynasty: "Light up hundreds of bright-cornered lamps, high and low, shining like the day; the singing voice is ethereal, Straight into the sky. ”

4. Optimizing Pillar

qíng tiān zhī zhù

Idiom explanation: The pillar that supports the sky. Ancient myths and legends say that Kunlun Mountain has eight pillars holding up the sky, which was later used as a metaphor for people who can shoulder heavy responsibilities. Also known as "Jade Pillar Optimizing the Sky".

The source of the idiom: Volume 103 of Zhang Junfang's "Seven Lots of Clouds" in the Song Dynasty: "The pillars holding up the sky are marked with meritorious deeds, including the sea and the Mingjun."

5. Standing majestically< /p>

wēi rán yì lì

Idiom explanation: Weiran: extremely high; standing: the mountain is upright and towering. It is like a mountain standing straight on the ground, unshakable.

Source of the idiom: Section 3 of Liang Qichao's "Xin Min Shuo": "Our country stands majestically in Dadong, surrounded by small barbarians, and has no communication with other big countries."

6. One after another

cǐ fú bǐ qǐ

Explanation of the idiom: Get up here, go down there. Description after description.

/p>

céng luán dié zhàng

Idiom explanation: Luan: mountain peak; Zhang: towering, steep mountain peak like a barrier. Describes overlapping mountains; peaks and ridges connected; continuous. Also known as "layers of rocks and peaks" and "layers of mountains and cliffs".

The source of the idiom: "Books with Wang Qianzhong" by Lu Jiuyuan of the Song Dynasty: "Between the eaves of the abbot, there are many mountains, galloping and flying.

"

8. High mountains and steep mountains

chóng shān jùn lǐng

The idiom explains Chong: high; Jun: the mountains are high and steep. Tall, steep and dangerous mountains. Also known as " "High mountains and steep ridges".

The idiom comes from Jin Wang Xizhi's "Preface to the Lanting Collection": "There are high mountains and lofty ridges here, with lush forests and bamboos. " 5. Four-character words with the word "military"

Four-character words with the word "military":

General of the Ben Army,

Tune yourself to sleep and join the army,

People's Liberation Army Daily,

Sweeping thousands of armies,

Hucao joined the army,

General Wuwei,

Rewarding the three armies, < /p>

Central Military Commission,

Marching Sima,

The sudden rise of the army,

General Caiguan,

Mao Hulu Army,

General Huangwu,

Shu Xiang’s Military Camp,

General Yan’s Head,

General Bai Chong,

Feather Fan Waijun,

Irregular Army,

General Li,

General Baidi,

General Jingpan,

Mustache to join the army,

Recognize the military flag,

General Wuyi,

General Longxiang,

Fengxian warlord,

My wife is in the army,

Military and civilian joint defense,

Powerful three armies,

Central Red Army 6. One army fights one or four in a day Idiom of one word

A four-character idiom of one day and one army - dizzy

dizzy

yūn tóu zhuàn xiàng

Explanation of dizzy. : dizzy; turning: unable to discern direction. Describing confusion or confusion.

Source: Zhou Erfu's "Morning in Shanghai" Part 35: "Qiao Zhu". Grandma was dizzy after hearing this. It was completely beyond her expectation that her son had changed, and he had changed so quickly! ”

Structural conjunction.

Usage is used in direction, thought and understanding things; it can refer to people or animals. Generally used as predicate, attributive, adverbial and complement. < /p>

Correct pronunciation; cannot be read as "zhuǎn"

Dizzy; cannot be written as "faint"

Synonyms: dizzy

Antonyms. Clear-headed

Analysis ~ and "沀头Turn" both have the meaning of "being dizzy; confused about the direction", but "沀头Turn" focuses more on "coma, confusion"; ~ focuses more on "being comatose and confused". "faint"; light semantics.

Example My words always make people embarrassed, ~.

English translation Not know whether one is (standing) on ??one's head or one's heels 7. Four-character words containing army

Nineteenth Route Army

General Liu Meng

General Domineering

General Zhao Si

General Yili

Beiyang Navy

General Victorious

Wife is in the army

The army was defeated

Teasing Join the army

Lose the army and lose generals

Feng Clan Warlord

Yunnan Clique Warlord

Mao Hulu Army

Lou Ship General

Five Generals

The army approaches the city

Navy Yamen

General Jinwu

Marching Sima< /p>

General Xiao Li

General Yunhui

Remaining army in Biye

The whole army was destroyed

Mingjin collected the army

New Model Army

Organizing the Army and Using Military Skills

Defeating the General

Destroying the Army and Killing the General

Materials Officer General