Idioms containing the word moth

1. Idiom about the word moth: A moth has crooked eyebrows and a square forehead. Describe the beauty of a woman's appearance

A moth in a fire is a metaphor for self-destruction.

The moth puts out the fire, which is a metaphor for death.

Moth eyebrows: long and curved eyebrows, like the tentacles of a silkworm moth. Slender eyebrows and white teeth. Describe the beauty of women.

A moth to a fire is like a moth to a fire. Metaphor is asking for a dead end and self-destructive future.

A moth to a fire is like a moth to a fire. Metaphor is asking for a dead end and self-destructive future.

White-toothed moth eyebrow: white appearance; Moth eyebrows: slender and beautiful eyebrows of women. White teeth and beautiful eyebrows. Describe a woman's dignified and beautiful appearance, also known as beauty.

Cicada is a kind of cicada. A cicada's head: the forehead is wide; Moth eyebrow: The eyebrow is thin and long. Broad forehead, curved eyebrows. Describe the beauty of women.

Sweep a moth eyebrow, thrush. Refers to women's elegant makeup.

A moth to the fire Watch "A moth to the fire"

A moth to the fire Watch "A moth to the fire"

2. The four-character words with peas have no four-character words or idioms composed of peas.

Pea pinyin: wān, radical: bean, external stroke: 8, total stroke: 15.

Wu Bi: GKUB, Cang Xie: MTJNU

Stroke order: フノフノフフフフフフ

Explanation:

1, an annual or biennial herb with pods.

2. The seeds of this plant.

Extended data

Chinese character strokes:

Related words:

First, peas

1, an annual or biennial herb with pinnately compound leaves, oval leaflets, white or purplish red flowers, pods and subglobose seeds. Young pods and seeds can be eaten.

2. The pods and seeds of this plant.

Second, pea seedlings

The tender stems and leaves of peas.

3. Wild peas

A general term for nest vegetables.

Four. Pea leaf

Namely pea seedlings.

Verb (abbreviation for verb) copper pea

Metaphor old threshold, romantic figure.

3. The four-character idiom "Eight Hammer Nine in Lu 'an"

new word

Basic explanation

Luan Ba, a native of Chengdu in the Eastern Han Dynasty, was good at Taoism. Once at a grand banquet in the imperial court, he spilled the wine given by the emperor to the southwest. The court wanted to punish him for his disrespect. He said: "I saw a fire in Chengdu, and I didn't dare to be disrespectful for washing wine for the rain." I asked, and sure enough. See Jin's "Fairy Biography, Chaos Eight". Later, it was used as a fire protection law. Li Han's "Qiu Meng" in the Five Dynasties: "Luan eight hammers wine, Yan Shi dances wood." The difference between Yuan Mei's Essays on the Garden and the ancient books in Qing Dynasty: "The legend of Luan Ba drank and put out the fire, while Fan Ying and Guo Xian in the Book of Southern Han were not Luan Ba."