Jian Ling Gao House
Jian: pour water, splash water; Ling: a bottle containing water. Pour the water in the bottle from the top of a high-rise building. It is a metaphor for being condescending and unstoppable. Same as " "Building a high position".
Establishing meritorious deeds
Jian: to establish; merit: meritorious deeds; ye: career. Establish meritorious deeds and achieve great achievements.
Source: Su Shi of the Song Dynasty, "The First Two "Book Making": "The ancient sages made great contributions to the country, made profits and defended against dangers, and all the small things they accomplished were considerable." Example: He studied military books assiduously, practiced martial arts seriously, and prepared to make contributions to the motherland
Zuo Jian Foreign Yi
Use unfair means to establish authority and change laws. Source: "Historical Records·Biographies of Shang Jun": "Now the king has also left the Foreign Yi to build it, which is not what he taught." Sima Zhensuo Yin: "Zuo Jian means to establish authority with the left way; Wai Yi means to change the emperor's life through external revolution." Wang Boxiang noted: "Zuo means losing the right way, and outside means losing the center. According to common sense in the story, it is called 'Left Way', and it is also called 'Heterogeneous Way'. '. Usage: used as predicates and attributives; used in written language
Operation planning and strategy
Explain the planning situation and formulate combat strategies. Source: "Book of Sui·Li Delin Biography": "Operation planning and strategy" , to reach the deep and dark world, those who follow orders will be safe, and those who disobey will be in trouble." Example "~, to reach the deep and dark world, those who follow orders will be safe, and those who disobey will be in trouble." "Sui Shu" is used as predicate, attributive, Object; used for doing things
Xuan jiàn duó
Pinyin xuán táo jiàn duó The explanation refers to listening to the opinions of the subjects. The source is from "Huainanzi·Fan Lun Xun": "In the time of Yu He listens to the five tones, hangs bells, drums, and chimes, and sets up a mantle to wait for the people from all directions. The title is: He who teaches the poor people to follow the Tao beats the drums; Those who are worried beat the chimes, and those who are in jail shake their chimes." Feng Guifen of the Qing Dynasty wrote in his "Preface to "Protests in the Xiaobilu": "Looking at today's admonitions for the appointment of special officials, the people are not able to live up to their standards, but only then do we know that the sage hangs the chime to build a priest. , the law of the common people is good." Chen Chi of the Qing Dynasty's "Yuan": "The law of the Western Taiyuan House is the ancients who set up priests, and it is the legacy of Lu Shi Dangzheng." The preface to Feng Guifen's "Xiao Xi Lu Protest" in the Qing Dynasty: " When the people are hidden and cannot reach the highest level, they only know the sage~, and the Dharma passed down by the common people is good."
Idiom story During the reign of Yu the Great, he set up five bells, drums, chimes, bells, and harpoons near his residence. He also prescribed musical instruments for the sages from all over the world how to use them: those who preached beat drums, those who preached righteousness would ring bells, those who reported troubles would vibrate the altar, those who expressed worries would ring chimes, and those who had injustices would shake their chimes. So Dayu listened to These five sounds are dealt with
Breaking bamboo and building a bridge
The explanation is a metaphor for an extremely smooth and unstoppable situation. Source: Wei Yuan of the Qing Dynasty, Volume 7 of "Shengwu Ji": "From Xiling The middle peak reaches directly to the Ge'er Cliff, and it really has the potential to break the bamboo and build a bridge." Example: We have formed a ~ momentum, and victory is in sight. Use it as an attributive; it refers to an unstoppable trend