A four-character idiom with compromise

1. Four-character idioms with folds

Four-character idioms with folds:

Uncompromising,

Unyielding,

A broken eyebrow, a broken waist,

A lost army, a lost general,

Twists and turns,

A broken rule,

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Just a few words,

Broken arms,

Folded glue and dropped fingers,

A lot of trouble,

The barbarians are injured and the nose is broken,

the willows are broken and the flowers are broken,

the halberd is broken and the sand sinks,

the right and wrong are compromised,

the hairpin, pen and chime are broken ,

Broken bonds and abandoned bonds,

Zhu Yun broke the threshold,

Broken bows and swords,

Invincible,

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If you break your head, you will not regret it.

If you throw a shuttle, you will break your teeth.

If you fold it in a regular way,

If the wood is strong, it will break.

The bottle sinks and the hairpin breaks,

The fighting breaks and the snake moves,

The twists and turns,

The willows break and the flowers climb,

Seven 20% off,

Climb the toad and win the laurels,

The moon falls and the flowers are off 2. Four-character idioms containing Mi

All the rage: Basic explanation: Describe things It is extremely prevalent in a period of time, like wind blowing down grass and trees.

Pinyin pronunciation: fēng mǐ yī shí

Usage example: The story of "The Peony Pavilion" was once so ~ that it made many people cry, which is an example. (Qin Mu's "Colorful Wings of Fantasy")

Synonyms: popular for a while, flourishing for a while

Antonyms: enduring for a long time

Usage: partial Formal; used as predicate and attributive; refers to popularity

Kuaduoduimi: Basic explanation: It originally refers to writing articles with long length and gorgeous rhetoric to show off and compete for victory. Later, it also refers to lively, luxurious and extravagant competitions.

Pinyin pronunciation: kuā duō dòu mí

Usage example: After the Song Dynasty, scholars liked to boast and fight. (Volume 5 of Yuan Mei's "Suiyuan Shihua" in the Qing Dynasty)

How to use: conjunction; used as predicate and attributive; refers to reading or writing articles that are praised for their large number and gorgeous rhetoric

Source of the idiom: Tang Dynasty Han Yu's "Preface to Chen Xiucai": "Reading is for learning, and narrating is for writing. It is not to boast too much but to fight for excess."

There are survivors in exhaustion: Basic explanation: exhaustion: None, nothing; relic: legacy, remainder. There is nothing left.

Pinyin pronunciation: mǐ yǒu jié yí

Usage example: Therefore, every time there is the most complicated species in ancient times, the customs will gradually change, and over hundreds of thousands of years, they will disappear. As for ~, they are ancient beasts and birds as seen by mineralogists. (Yan Fu's "Yuan Qiang")

Usage: verb-object; as predicate; means there is no remainder

Source of the idiom: "Poetry Daya Yunhan": "Zhou Yulimin, ” 3. Four-character idioms with no x and no x (with back meanings)

1. Neither ancient nor modern

bù gǔ bù jīn

The explanation refers to something abnormal, something that 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. Often used as a metaphor for compromise.

Source from "Tai Xuan Jing Geng" written by Yang Xiong of the Han Dynasty: "Children and wildebeests are neither modern nor ancient."

Structural conjunction idioms

Usage Used as predicates and attributives; used in written language

Synonyms: unprecedented and unique

Example sentence: Two torches are seen in the distance, suspected to be the eyes of a tiger. When they come to the front, there are several official servants wearing clothes ~.

(Qing Dynasty Ji Yun's "Yuewei Thatched Cottage Notes" Volume 18)

2. Not up, not down

bù shàng bù xià

Explain that you can't go up, Can't get off. Describe a dilemma.

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Structural conjunction idioms

Usage conjunction; used as predicate, attributive, complement; to describe good or bad

Synonyms dilemma, dilemma

Antonym of reaching the top

Example from Lu Xun's "Weeds After Death": "I have always lived a life of neither happiness nor perdition, nor can I live up to any expectations.

Keep secrets as deep as a secret, make people laugh generously, purple energy comes from the east, thousands of horses galloping, a promise of a thousand gold, an old horse knows the way, five flowers are tied up, stretched thin, under melon fields and plum trees, water overflowing Jinshan, hard work is solitary, it can be seen, all over the world, open-minded, playing hard to get, rumbling, self-recommended, clues, golden mean, lost Know how to return, be free, fly with dragons and phoenixes, the trees have deep roots, the sky will be clear after the rain, ride the wind and waves, the road is full of blue and blue, worry about gain and loss, a gentleman is greedy, be beyond the reach of the whip, catch the fish in the swamp, become prosperous, the firefly in the bag reflects the snow, the moth flies into the fire, self-pity, the wind is racing, the white horse is not Horse, retreat to three houses, three mountains and five mountains, contentment, looking at plum blossoms to quench thirst, standing alone, enlightening, strategizing, running away, nothing can help, being on target, overcorrecting, anger will be repaid, belatedly coming, making a blockbuster, tireless, one horse level, three points into the tree, collusion, family relationship Le brothers hate the wall, Lotus roots are tied together, wandering minds, whimsical, blind people touching elephants, happy brows, three religions and nine streams, high-rise buildings, perseverance, going too far, hanging on the dog's tail, drinking bachelors, looking up at the mountains, inseparable, cautious, returning to nature, thinking about the wise, following the map, bullets, bullets, unruly, unruly, encountering people. Shuxue, sanctimonious, famous all over the world, hypocritical and conceited, invincible, the truth is revealed, neither humble nor arrogant, lawless, pushing back ideas, feasting and adapting to local conditions, going straight to the point, changing the situation, Arabian Nights, accomplished overnight, ambitious, invincible, difficult to fly with wings, unable to see, endless lies, arrogance The dragon has regrets, sighs at the ocean, loves the house and the bird, has a startling glance, is unparalleled in splendor, places of interest, is like walking on thin ice, perseveres, is subtle, is short-lived, Wushan clouds and rain, cunning rabbits in three burrows, weathered by wind and rain, appalling, taken out of context, unexpectedly, thank God, stand out, listen to politics behind the curtain, take the lead I'm not ashamed to ask, no. 5. Four-character idioms with metaphorical meanings

It is used to describe attracting disaster (to lure the wolf into the house)

It is used to describe being short-sighted (the eyes of a mouse are short-sighted)

It is used to describe bluffing (a fox pretends to be a tiger) )

It is used as a metaphor for rareness and preciousness (rare and rare)

It is used as a metaphor for narrow knowledge (a frog at the bottom of a well)

It is used as a metaphor for futility and futility (a mantis' arm blocking a car)

It is used as a metaphor for great success (immediate success)

It is used as a metaphor for throwing oneself into a trap (a moth flies into the flame)

It is used as a metaphor for confusing the real thing with a fake one (a fish is caught in the eye)

It is used for a metaphor for a dangerous situation. (To pull a tooth out of a tiger's mouth)

It is used to describe the majestic momentum (thousands of horses galloping)

It is used to describe being cornered (a dog jumps over the wall)

It is used to describe the sadness of the same kind (the rabbit dies and the fox is sad)

It is a metaphor for escaping (the golden cicada escapes from its shell)

It is a metaphor for deceiving people (to lure a tiger away from the mountain)

It is a metaphor for following what others say (parroting)

It is a metaphor for confusion It is used as a metaphor for right and wrong (referring to a deer as a horse)

It is used as a metaphor for collusion to do evil (complexity leads to adultery)

It is used as a metaphor for time passing by (a fleeting moment)

It is used as a metaphor for people to stand out (to stand out from the flock)

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It is a metaphor for using at the end of the road (a fish swimming in the bottom of a cauldron)

It is a metaphor for being willing to serve (for the work of a dog and a horse)

It is a metaphor for using two minds and two minds (a monkey's mind and a horse's mind)

It is used as a metaphor for familiarity with things (the cook Ding explains the cow)

It is used as a metaphor for old age and high ambitions (Laoji Fufeng)

It is used for a metaphor of fierce struggle (competition in the Central Plains)

It is used for a rough observation It is used for things (the blind man feels the elephant)

It is used to describe the new official's arrival (to take office)

It is used to describe the signs that can be found (clues)

The ambition of a wolf with a heart and a dog's lungs, and the ambition of a wolf who commits crime in a helter-skelter manner

Thousands of calls and thousands of threads