1. What are the four-character idioms with the character mink?
There are 11 four-character idioms with the character mink:
1. Dog tail continues mink gǒu wěi xù diāo
Explanation continued: Connection. It was used as a decoration on the hats of the emperor's attendants in the Jin Dynasty. It is said that the official appointment is too excessive. It is also a metaphor for taking bad things and putting them behind good things. The two parts are very disproportionate.
2. Dog continues golden mink gǒu xù jīn diāo
Explanation: It is a metaphor for officials who have been granted excessive titles.
3. The zodiac sign of mink and dog is diāo gǒu xiāng shǔ
The explanation means that the true and false or good and bad are mixed together.
4. Diao Chan is full of diāo chán mǎn zuò
Explanation of Diao Chan: the decoration on the hats of attendant officials in the Han Dynasty, and was used to refer to high-ranking officials. It used to mean that there were too many officials and titles.
5. Exchange mink fur for wine diāo qiú huàn jiǔ
Explanation of mink fur: a coat made of mink fur. Trade mink coats for booze. Describe the bohemian life of precious people.
6. The dog continues the mink tail gǒu xù diāo wěi
The explanation refers to the excessive use of official titles. It is also a metaphor for taking bad things and putting them behind good things. The two parts are very disproportionate. Same as "the dog's tail continues the mink".
7. Dog-tailed mink continued gǒu wěi diāo xù
Explanation: It is a metaphor for taking a bad thing and connecting it to a good thing. The two parts are very disproportionate. Same as "the dog's tail continues the mink".
8. Jin mink for wine jīn diāo huàn jiǔ
Explanation of golden mink: the crown ornament of the emperor's left and right courtiers after the Han Dynasty. Take off the gold crown and exchange it for fine wine. Describes informality and indulgence in drinking.
9. Jin Diao takes wine jīn diāo qǔ jiǔ
Explanation: Take off the gold crown and exchange it for fine wine. Describes informality and indulgence in drinking. Same as "golden mink for wine".
10. Jin Diaojiu jīn diāo shì jiǔ
Explanation: take off the gold crown and exchange it for fine wine. Describes informality and indulgence in drinking. Same as "golden mink for wine". 2. What are the four-character idioms that describe "sable"?
1. sable fur for wine [diāo qiú huàn jiǔ]: sable fur: a coat made of mink fur. Trade mink coats for booze. Describe the bohemian life of precious people.
2. Dog tail continued mink [gǒu wěi xù diāo]: continued: connection. It was used as a decoration on the hats of the emperor's attendants in the Jin Dynasty. It is said that the official appointment is too excessive. It is also a metaphor for taking bad things and putting them behind good things. The two parts are very disproportionate.
3. Diao Chan is full [ diāo chán mǎn zuò ]: Diao Chan: a decoration on the hats of attendant officials in the Han Dynasty, and was used to refer to high-ranking officials. It used to mean that there were too many officials and titles.
4. The zodiac sign of mink and dog [diāo gǒu xiāng shǔ] means that the true and false or good and bad are mixed together.
5. Jin Diaojiu [jīn diāo shì jiǔ]: Take off the gold crown and exchange it for fine wine. Describes informality and indulgence in drinking. Same as "golden mink for wine".
3. What are the four-character idioms with the word mink?
There are 11 four-character idioms with the word mink: 1. Dog tail continuation mink gǒu wěi xù diāo Explanation continuation: connection. The attendant officials of the Jin Dynasty emperor used it as a hat Decorate. Refers to the excessive appointment of officials. It also refers to the use of bad things to add to the back of good things. The two parts are very disproportionate. 2. Dog continues gold mink gǒu xù jīn diāo explanation. It is a metaphor for officials who have been granted excessive titles. 3. Mink Dog belongs to the zodiac diāo gǒu xiāng shǔ. The explanation refers to the mixture of true and false or good and bad. 4. Diao Chan is full of diāo chán mǎn zuò. Diao Chan: the decoration on the hats of the attendant officials in the Han Dynasty. It was used to refer to high-ranking officials. It used to refer to the number of officials. And excessive. 5. Mink fur is exchanged for wine diāo qiú huàn jiǔ. Explanation of mink fur: a coat made of mink fur. Exchange mink fur coat for wine to drink. Describes the bohemian life of a precious person. 6. Dog x mink tail gǒu xù diāo wěi explanation means The official title is too excessive. It is also a metaphor for adding something bad to the back of a good thing. The two parts are very disproportionate. Same as "a dog-tailed mink continues". 7. A dog-tailed mink continues gǒu wěi diāo xù. Explanation: It is a metaphor for using something bad to make up for it. It is attached to the back of something good, and the front and back parts are very inconsistent. It is the same as "a dog's tail continues with a mink". 8. Jin Mink exchanges for wine jīn diāo huàn jiǔ Explanation Jin Mink: the crown ornament of the emperor's left and right courtiers after the Han Dynasty. Take off the gold crown and exchange it for fine wine. The description is informal Etiquette, indulge in drinking as much as you want. 9. Jin Diao takes wine jīn diāo qǔ jiǔ. Interpretation: take down the golden crown and exchange it for fine wine. Describes not following the etiquette, indulge in drinking as much as you want. Same as "Gold Diao in exchange for wine". 10. Jin Diao wine jīn diāo shì jiǔ, explanation: remove it. Gold crowns for fine wines. It describes people who indulge in drinking without restraint of etiquette. Same as "golden minks for wine." 4. What are the four-character idioms about snakes?
Superfluous,
Snake’s shadow,
Virtual and entrusting snake,
Bull, ghost and snake god,
The pen moves like a dragon and a snake,
The head of an anticlimax and the tail of a snake,
To scare the snake away from the grass,
The snake moves in a fight,
The head of a snake is like a rat's eye,
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Gray lines of grass and snakes,
Alarming snakes into the grass,
Snakes and scorpions with hearts,
Mixed dragons and snakes,
Buddha's Mouth and Snake's Heart,
Dragon's Head and Snake's Tail,
Sealed Boar and Long Snake,
Pearl of the Spirit Snake,
Spring Earthworm and Autumn Snake ,
Three snakes and seven rats,
The dragon and the snake are all year old,
The flying birds scare the snake,
The dragon and the snake are flying,
One dragon and one snake,
The shadow of the snake in the cup,
Digging the grass to find the snake,
The snake’s mouth and the bee’s sting,
Flying dragon and snake,
Snake wants to swallow an elephant,
Holding a snake and riding a tiger,
Bow shadow cup snake
Bottom of the pen Dragons and snakes,
Poisonous snakes and fierce beasts,
Horrible dragons and walking snakes,
Greedy snakes forget their tail,
Snakes eat and whales swallow,
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Talking to the snake,
Drawing the feet for the snake,
The dragon bends and the snake stretches,
One snake has two heads,
Dragons, ghosts and snake gods,
Long dragons turned into snakes,
Owls, snakes and ghosts,
Boars divided into snakes,
Sealing pigeons Repair the snake,
The ghost car of the cup of snake,
Startle the snake,
The shadow of the snake on the wall,
The whale swallows the snake,
Raise a snake to become a snake,
A cup of snake phantom,
Add enough for a snake,
Snakes and scorpions are the heart,
Draw a snake with its feet,
Walking snake and earthworm 5. Four-character idioms about snakes
1. The shadow of the snake in the cup and bow mistook the shadow of the bow reflected in the wine glass for a snake. A metaphor for fear caused by suspicion.
2. Calligraphy is described as vivid and powerful.
3. Digging for snakes is a metaphor for provoking evil people and looking for trouble.
4. Spring earthworm and autumn snake are metaphors for poorly written characters, which are crooked and like the traces of crawling earthworms and snakes.
5. To scare a snake from the grass is a metaphor for punishing a dodder and a dodder. Later, it is often used as a metaphor for being careless, which makes the other party wary.
6. Dou Zhe Snake Dou Zhe: As zigzag as the arrangement of the Big Dipper. Curved like the Big Dipper, zigzagging like a snake. Describe the winding road.
7. Birds frighten snakes just like birds entering the forest and frightened snakes scurrying into the grass. Describe cursive writing as natural and smooth.
8. The seal of pig and long snake is: big; the seal of pig is: big pig; the seal of long snake is: big snake. Greedy as a pig, cruel as a snake. A metaphor for a violent person and an aggressor.
9. The metaphor of Buddha’s mouth and snake’s heart is a metaphor that although the words may sound pleasant, the heart is extremely vicious.
10. When a viper stings a hand, a strong man cuts off his wrist immediately to prevent the poison from spreading to the whole body and endangering his life. It is a metaphor that when things come to a critical juncture, one must make a decisive decision. Also metaphorically.
11. The tiger-headed snake has a head as big as a tiger and a tail as thin as a snake. The metaphor starts with a lot of momentum, but ends up with very little momentum, with a beginning and no end.
12. Add feet to a snake When drawing a snake, add feet to the snake. The metaphor of doing unnecessary things is not only unhelpful, but also inappropriate.
13. To scare the snake into the grass describes the vigorous and lively cursive writing.
14. The Pearl of the Spirit Snake is the Sui Pearl. The original metaphor is priceless. Later, it is also used as a metaphor for extraordinary talents.
15. The dragon and snake fly as if the dragon is soaring and the snake is swimming. It describes calligraphy as vigorous and vigorous, with strong pen power.
16. The mixture of dragon and snake is a metaphor for good people and bad people mixed together.
17. Bull ghost and snake god. A ghost with a bull head and a god with a snake body. The original description is fantasy and grotesque. The latter is a metaphor for all kinds of bad people in society.
18. Grass snakes and gray lines are metaphors for things leaving vague clues and signs.
19. Long dragon becomes snake dragon: small snake, poisonous snake. Refers to the legacy of fostering adultery. It is a metaphor for indulging the enemy and allowing him to become stronger. And leave behind trouble.
20. The long snake seals the pig, the long snake and the big pig. A metaphor for those who are greedy and violent.
21. The metaphor of spring snake and autumn earthworm refers to poorly written characters, which are crooked and like the traces of crawling earthworms and snakes.
22. The snake in the grass was startled by the snake in the grass. The original metaphor is to punish A and make B alert. Later, it is often used as a metaphor for being careless, which makes the other party wary. Same as "to alert the snake".
23. Venomous snakes and beasts generally refer to animals that are threatening to human life. A metaphor for those who are greedy and violent.
24. Feng Xiu Xiu Snake is a metaphor for a greedy person and an aggressor. Same as "Sealing Pig and Changing Snake".
25. The metaphor of Buddha’s heart and snake’s mouth is a metaphor that although the words may sound pleasant, the heart is extremely vicious.
26. A snake with a bow’s shadow on a cup sees “a bow’s shadow floating on a cup”. It is still said that there is a shadow of a snake with a cup and a bow. Describes being suspicious and disturbing oneself.
27. The dragon and the snake were robbed. Describe the momentum.
28. Drawing a snake on its feet is a metaphor for doing unnecessary things. It is not only unhelpful, but also inappropriate. The same as "adding insult to injury".
29. Walking snake earthworm describes the font as coiled as a snake earthworm, making it difficult to read.
30. Whales and snakes eat like whales and snakes. A metaphor for embezzlement and annexation.
31. The metaphor of dragon, ghost and snake is strange and strange.
32. The dragon bends and the snake stretches out, which is a metaphor for a gentleman being wronged and a villain succeeding.
33. The flying dragon and snake describe the vigorous and vivid calligraphy strokes.
34. The dragon's head and the snake's tail are a metaphor for a grand beginning and a decline at the end.
35. Snake-eater: eat like a snake. To swallow: to swallow like a whale. It is a metaphor that the strong gradually annex the weak.
36. Snake head and rat eyes describe a person’s ugly appearance and evil intentions. Also known as "snake eyebrows and rat eyes".
37. Scorpion: A poisonous insect of the spider type. Describes a vicious heart.
38. The heart of a snake, the mouth of a Buddha, the heart of a snake. The metaphor may sound nice, but the heart is extremely vicious.
39. Snake Shadow Cup Bow mistook the bow shadow in the wine glass for a snake. It is a metaphor for being frightened and frightened due to suspicion.
40. The pig is divided and the snake is broken, which is a metaphor for fragmentation.
41. Sui is in the year of dragon and snake, and the star of the year; dragon, refers to Chen; snake, refers to Si. The latter indicates that the destiny will be final.
42. Drawing feet for a snake is a metaphor for doing something extraneous, which is not only unhelpful, but actually harmful.
43. Adding more to a snake is a metaphor for doing something extraneous, which is not only unhelpful, but actually harmful. Same as "painting feet for snake".
44. Kneel talk Snake walking while kneeling and talking, lying on the ground. He was extremely intimidated.
45. Owls, snakes and ghosts are a metaphor for ugly people. 6. Four-character idioms with Diao Chan
The house is full of Diao Chan Diao Chan: a decoration on the hats of attendant officials in the Han Dynasty, and was used to refer to high-ranking officials. It used to mean that there were too many officials and titles.
Exchange mink fur for wine. Mink fur: a coat made of mink fur. Trade mink coats for booze. Describe the bohemian life of precious people.
The dog's tail is followed by the mink. It is a metaphor for taking a bad thing and patching it up behind a good thing. The two parts are very disproportionate.
The golden mink exchanges for wine. Take off the crown and exchange it for fine wine. Describes informality and indulgence in drinking.
If there are not enough minks, the dog’s tail will continue.
① Pointing out too many officials. ② Refers to a fly in the ointment or shoddy quality.
The zodiac sign of mink and dog means that the true and false or good and bad are mixed together.
The continuation of the dog-tailed mink is a metaphor for taking a bad thing and attaching it to a good thing. The two parts are very disproportionate. Same as "the dog's tail continues the mink".
The dog continues the mink's tail, which means that the official appointment is too excessive. It is also a metaphor for taking bad things and putting them behind good things. The two parts are very disproportionate. Same as "the dog's tail continues the mink".
The dog is followed by the golden mink, which is a metaphor for officials who have been granted excessive titles.
The Golden Sable takes the wine and takes off the gold crown to exchange for fine wine. Describes informality and indulgence in drinking. Same as "golden mink for wine".
Golden Diaoji Wine Take off the golden crown and exchange it for fine wine. Describes informality and indulgence in drinking. Same as "golden mink for wine". 7. What are the four-character words about snakes?
To scare the snake away from grass,
Snake-hearted,
Spring earthworm and autumn snake,
Owl snake Ghost,
Boar divided into snakes,
Snake shadow on the wall,
Tiger head and snake tail,
Sealed pig and long snake,
Adding superfluity to a snake,
Sealing a snake and repairing a snake,
Fighting and breaking a snake,
One dragon and one snake,
Snake-headed rat Eye,
The shadow of the snake in the cup and bow,
The snake wants to swallow the elephant,
The gray line of the grass snake,
Digging through the grass to find the snake,
Raising a snake into a snake,
A cup of snake and a ghost chariot,
A greedy snake forgetting its tail,
Talking to a snake,
The phantom and the snake,
The phantom of the cup snake,
The snake's mouth and the bee's needle,
The pearl of the spirit snake,
The cow ghost and the snake god,
The age is dragon and snake,
The dragon and snake are flying,
The dragon is bending and the snake is stretching,
Holding a snake and riding a tiger 8. The four characters with snake characters What are the idioms of Chinese characters?
Fighting with snakes, snakes and scorpions with hearts, dragons and snakes flying, dragons and snakes flying, tiger heads and tails
1. Fighting with snakes [dǒu zhé shé xíng]
Definition: Dou Zhe: Like the arrangement of the Big Dipper. Curved like the Big Dipper, zigzagging like a snake. Describe the winding road.
Source: Tang Dynasty Liu Zongyuan's "Eight Notes of Yongzhou· Xiaoshitan": "Looking to the southwest, fighting and twisting snakes can be seen, light and death are visible."
Translation: To the west of Xiaoshitan Looking to the south, I saw that the stream was as winding as the Big Dipper, and the water was meandering like a snake. One part was bright and the other part was dark and invisible.
2. Snake-hearted [ shé xiē xīn cháng ]
Definition: Scorpion: a poisonous insect of the spider type. Describes a vicious heart.
Source: The second fold of Yuan·Anonymous's "Hold the Makeup Box": "It is a snake-hearted person, not as poisonous as a scorpion."
Translation: Even the most insidious and cunning person , and I don’t want him to be so vicious.
3. Dragon and snake flying [ lóng shé fēi dòng ]
Definition: As if a dragon is flying and a snake is swimming. It describes calligraphy as vigorous and vigorous, with strong pen power.
Source: Song Dynasty Su Shi's "Xijiang Moon Pingshan Hall" lyrics: "I haven't seen the old immortal for ten years, and dragons and snakes are flying on the wall."
Translation: I haven't seen him for ten years. When I saw the old immortal, only his ink marks on the wall were still as powerful as a flying dragon and a dancing snake.
4. Flying dragon and snake [ lóng shé fēi wǔ ]
Definition: Describes the vigorous and vivid calligraphy strokes.
Source: Chapter 88 of "Flowers in the Mirror" by Li Ruzhen of the Qing Dynasty: "Like a flying dragon and snake, I wrote several sentences in a row."
Translation: The calligraphy style is vigorous and vivid Like dragons and snakes flying, I wrote several sentences in one breath.
5. Tiger head and snake tail [ hǔ tóu shé wěi ]
Interpretation: It is a metaphor for doing things that have a beginning but no end. At first, the momentum was great, but then it became so-so, and the momentum became less and less.
Source: Yuan Kangjin's "Li Kui Bears the Jing": "This guy dares to act like a dog with a wolf's heart; it starts with the beginning but ends with the tail."
Translation: This guy behaves fiercely and has a vicious heart, but he does things well There is a beginning and no end.