A. Words with wood and gold
A copper bell with a golden mouth and a wooden tongue, a wooden bell with a wooden tongue, is a wooden bell, which was used in ancient times for administrative and religious purposes to spread orders. Refers to a person who preaches education.
Gold, mother, wood, male: one of the five elements, the west belongs to gold; wood: one of the five elements, the east belongs to wood. Refers to the immortals East Prince and West Queen Mother. It is a metaphor for a talented and virtuous person.
Mugong Jinmu are the immortals Dongwanggong and Xiwangmu. Later it was used to celebrate birthdays, metaphorically referring to the host and his wife celebrating their birthdays.
B. What are the four-character idioms with the word "金" or "木"
1. Zhongkou 鄄金 [zhòng kǒu shuò jīn]: 鄄, melt. It describes that public opinion is so powerful that it can even melt metal. It is a metaphor that unanimous opinions can confuse right and wrong.
[Source] "Guoyu·Zhou Yuxia": "A united heart makes a city; a united mouth makes gold."
2. Solid as gold [gù ruò jīn tāng]: a city made of metal, a moat formed by boiling water. The fortifications are described as extremely strong.
[Source] "Book of Han·Kuai Tong Biography": "In the land of border cities, Yingcheng must be defended; they are all golden city soup pools; they cannot be attacked."
3. Indulgence in gold and paper [zhǐ zuì jīn mí]: The original meaning is to make people confused by the shining gold paper. Describe the luxurious and prosperous environment that makes people indulge.
[Source] "The Strange Current Situation Witnessed in Twenty Years" by Wu Jianren of the Qing Dynasty: "While talking, all the games have arrived one after another; the orchestra is noisy for a while; the hairpins are moving and the hairpins are flying; the people are drunk and reveling; the lights are feasting; until nine o'clock "It's been several minutes since we left."
4. Dead wood meets spring [kū mù féng chūn]: meet, meet. The dry trees regained their vitality in spring. It is a metaphor for a dying patient or thing to regain life.
[Source] Song Dynasty Shi Daoyuan's "Jingde Chuandeng Lu·Volume 23·The Monk of Mahayana Mountain in Tangzhou": "Ask: 'How does a dead tree look like when spring comes?' The teacher said: 'In the world Rarely. '"
5. 草木同兵 [cǎo mù jiē bīng]: wood, tree; all: all; all. The weeds and trees are like soldiers. It is a metaphor for an army that feels guilty when it is retreating; it regards all vegetation as enemy soldiers. It also describes paranoid delusions caused by extreme panic.
[Source] Chapter 25 of "Niehaihua" by Zeng Pu of the Qing Dynasty: "There is a strong sound of wind and cranes; the grass and trees are like soldiers."
6. Entering the wood three points [rù mù sān fēn] : According to legend, Wang Xizhi was writing on a wooden board. When he was carving, he found that the writing penetrated three-thirds of the way into the wooden board. The calligraphy is described as extremely powerful. Nowadays, the problem of multi-metaphor analysis is very profound.
[Source] "Book Break" by Zhang Huaiguan of the Tang Dynasty: "When the Emperor of Jin Dynasty offered sacrifices to the northern suburbs; he updated the edition; the workers cut it; the pen penetrated three points into the wood."
C. Li and wood. , what are the words and idioms related to gold?
SHēn shǒu yì chù
[Interpretation] Head: head; different: different; place: place. Refers to beheading.
[Quotation] Chen Ziang of the Tang Dynasty, "Book of Prison for the Unjust Cases of Shen Zong's People": "If you are convicted in heaven, your body and head are in a different place, and you are like an ant, how can you be called it?"
[Synonym] Separation of body and head
[Example] Since I have been in the East Palace, I have not lost any virtue. Even if I have committed some evil deeds, I will not be demoted but not ~. ◎Chapter 9 of "The Romance of the Gods" by Xu Zhonglin of the Ming Dynasty
D. What are the idioms with gold
1. The golden rule
Pinyin of the idiom: jīn kē yù lǜ
Explanation of the idiom: gold and jade: a metaphor for preciousness. Section, law: legal provisions. It originally means that the legal provisions are perfect. The latter refers to a creed that cannot be changed and must be observed.
The source of the idiom: "Hu Changshi Xiu Huangluzhai Ci" by Du Guangting of the former Shu Dynasty: "The golden rules and jade seals, Yunzhuan and Yao seals, precede all kinds of laws to write down the text."
2. Golden Age< /p>
Pinyin of the idiom: huáng jīn shídài
Explanation of the idiom: It refers to the most precious period in a person’s life. It also refers to the period when economy and culture are most prosperous.
Source of the idiom: Liao Zhongkai's "The Relationship between the Chinese People and Territory in the Construction of a New Country": "I don't want to fight in a legitimate way, but I hold my hands and wait for the golden age to touch me."
3. Fine gold and beautiful jade
Idiom pinyin: jīng jīn měi yù
Idiom explanation: a metaphor for pure and perfect people or things
Idiom source: Su Shi of the Song Dynasty, Part 1 of "Reply to Huang Lu Zhi Shu": "This person is like fine gold and jade. He is not a person but a person. He will escape his name and will not be able to get it. Why should I praise him?"
4. Points Iron into gold
Pinyin of the idiom: diǎn tiě chéng jīn
Explanation of the idiom: It originally refers to the ability of ancient alchemists to use elixirs to turn iron (stone) into gold; now it is often used as a metaphor for revising articles and paintings. Or you can excerpt some words and phrases and make some slight changes to create a masterpiece. It also means that teachers are good at educating students.
The source of the idiom: Huang Tingjian of the Song Dynasty's "Reply to Hong Ju's Father": "Those who can write articles in ancient times can really cultivate all things. Even if they take the ancient sayings and put them into calligraphy, they are like a magic pill that turns iron into gold. Also. ”
5. Bedside gold is exhausted
Idiom pinyin: chuáng tóu jīn jìn
Idiom explanation: the old time describes running out of money; falling into poverty .
Source of the idiom: Tang Zhang's poem "Traveling is Difficult": "If you don't see all the gold on the bedside, a strong man has no color."
E. What are the idioms about belting wood
Rotten wood is hard to carve,
Grass is used to clothe wood,
Trees fall back to their original roots,
Earthen cows and wooden horses,
Moved to the arbor,
Chrysanthemum tongue,
Standing tree at the south gate,
Exotic trees and flowers,
Dead wood grows flowers, < /p>
Silly as a wooden chicken,
with sparse vegetation,
Taishan beams,
earth and wood-shaped skeletons,
pond fish Forest trees,
beetles broke the trees,
bamboo sawdust,
mountain trees were bandits,
whittled the wood into officials,
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Climb the trees to find fish,
Hachiko grass and trees,
The wind and trees contain sadness,
Sing in the trees,
Wood wood brain,
Coiled wood rotten plant,
Plants and trees know their power,
One tree is difficult to support,
The tree of joints,
Rotten wood cannot be carved,
Throw in wood and you will be rewarded with gold,
Raise the wooden chicken to the end
F. Combinations of wood and gold Idiom
Mother of wood and gold,
Golden mouth and wooden tongue,
Wood carving flows with gold,
Gold and wood make a good match,
I can only think of this much for now, so I just want to network myself.
G. Idioms with characters for gold and wood
A broken broom is as valuable as a thousand pieces of gold. It means that although something is not good, you cherish it very much.
The money on the bedside is exhausted. The money on the bedside is exhausted. It is a metaphor for running out of money and being trapped in life.
Cooking gold, food and jade. Cooking: pouring fire to cook; food: eating, eating. Describing sumptuous dishes.
Wrong color and engraved gold. Wrong: painting; engraved: engraving. The words used to describe the poem are very gorgeous.
Wear gold and wear purple gold: gold seal. Purple: purple ribbon. With a gold seal and a purple ribbon. Describes a very prominent position.
The Midas touch is used to describe changing a good article into something bad. It is also a metaphor for doing something bad.
Turning iron into gold originally refers to the magic of turning iron into gold with a touch of your finger. It is a metaphor for revising an article and making a slight change to the original text to make it outstanding.
Midas touch: spell, method. There is no magic that turns iron into gold. There is no best way to raise money and solve poverty.
Turning stone into gold is a metaphor for revising an article and making it outstanding by slightly changing the original text.
Eastern arrows and southern gold. Bamboo arrows from the east and copper from the south were both considered top-grade in ancient times. A metaphor for valuable talents.
Piles of gold and jade describe a great deal of wealth.
Stacking gold and jade There is so much gold and jade that it can be piled up. Describes possessing a lot of wealth.
When two people work together, they can break through metal. It is a metaphor that as long as two people work together, they can exert great power.
Buddha is decorated with gold, and people are decorated with clothes. It means that Buddha is decorated with gold, and people are decorated with clothes. It is a metaphor that people are not good on the inside and have to rely on their appearance.
H. Words with wood and gold
Trees
Seedlings
Shrubs
Trees
Cypress
Willow
Poplar
Pine
Phoebe
Sophora
Grass and trees
Dead wood
Forest trees
Building blocks
Gold, platinum, platinum, palladium, scholarships, relief funds, Student aid, thousands of gold, an inch of gold