Because the onion is hollow, so take the word "empty"; Money and money have the same pronunciation, so it is the word "money"; Garlic needs to be pouted, and the pronunciation of pouting is the same as that of Jue, so the word "Jue" is taken; Eggs are the backup of chickens, so putting the word "Hou" together is unprecedented.
This idiom means to surpass the previous generation or predecessors, and no one can inherit it. Later generations have made more unprecedented works, indicating that there has never been before and there will never be again. Unique, unique, and the best in the world. The word formation of this idiom is a combination, which is used as an attribute in a sentence to describe a very unusual occasion.
Unprecedented origin:
1, Song, Zhu Xiangxian's "Wen Ou Lu Men Joined the Army": In ancient times, Mulan was a woman who joined the army on behalf of her father and returned twelve years ago. People of the same age don't know that she is a woman, and her songs and poems are beautiful and classic, which is unprecedented for her.
2. The second poem in Yue's Four Poems is "Strange and Strange": the battle of Huaiyin is unprecedented in South China grammar.
3. Qing Wu Ren Jian's Sixteenth History of Pain: Three generations of grandparents and grandchildren have become the elders of the Three Dynasties, which is unprecedented.
Unprecedented idioms and allusions:
Gu Kaizhi in Jin Dynasty was outstanding in talent, profound in knowledge and outstanding in painting, which made him famous all over the world. Gu Kaizhi painted figures with vivid expressions and vivid images. What is unusual is that he never points his eyes first when drawing characters. Someone asked why, and he said: This is where the characters are vivid. One sentence tells the story, which makes people gasp in admiration. At that time, he was called a gifted scholar, a painter and an infatuation. During the Northern and Southern Dynasties, another great painter named Zhang Sengyou appeared in the Liang Dynasty.
He was good at painting landscapes, figures and Buddha statues, and was very famous at that time. Liang Wudi built many temples and pagodas and asked him to paint. It is said that once he drew four dragons on the wall of a temple, but he didn't give them eyes. When someone asked him why he didn't nod his eyes, he said, "I'm afraid if you nod your eyes, these dragons will break through the wall and fly away." They didn't believe him, so he ordered two. Sure enough, he broke the wall and flew away. Although this legend is exaggerated to the point of absurdity, it shows that his painting skills are superb.
In the Tang Dynasty, a relatively successful painter, Wu Daozi, combined painting with calligraphy. His landscapes and Buddhist paintings were very famous at that time, and his writing style was also good, so he was known as a book saint. According to legend, he painted a huge picture of Jialing River for Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty, and actually painted hundreds of miles of landscape in one day. He painted a picture of hell in disguise in Jingxuan Temple, without drawing ghosts, which was eerie. It is said that many people have turned over a new leaf after seeing this picture, abandoning evil and doing good.