Idioms about ancient poetry

Idioms from ancient poems:

Idiom 1: Low eyebrows and folded waists

From: Tang Dynasty Li Bai's "Sleepwalking Tianmu Yin Farewell": "An Neng Destroys the Eyebrows" I am unhappy because I bend my back to serve the powerful."

Idiom 2: Childhood sweethearts

Origin: The man came riding a bamboo horse and went around the bed to make green plums. ——Li Bai's "Changgan Xing"

Idiom 3: Soaring upward

Origin: A big roc rises with the wind in one day and soars ninety thousand miles. (Li Bai's poem "Shang Li Yong" of the Tang Dynasty)

Idiom 4: Long winds and waves

Source: Tang Li Bai's poem "The Road is Difficult": "There will be long winds and waves, and the clouds will hang straight Sailing across the sea."

Idiom 5: Dancing gracefully

Source: Tang Li Bai's "Gaoguli": "Dancing gracefully with wide sleeves, like a bird coming from the east."

Idiom 6: Between brothers

Origin: When brothers meet Yi Lu, the commander will definitely lose Xiao Cao. (Poem "Ode to Ancient Relics" by Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty)

Idiom 7: Howling of the Wind

Source: Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty's "Song of Thatched Cottage Broken by the Autumn Wind": "The high autumn wind howls in August, Vol. There are three layers of thatch on my house."

Idiom 8: Come Back from the Mountain

Source: Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty, "Late Autumn...Presented to Su Huan to Serve the Emperor": "Countless generals became the first in the West, and they became prime ministers in Dongshan early. ”

Idiom 9: The Year of the Seventies

Source: "Two Poems of Qujiang" by Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty: "Drinking debts are commonplace, and life is rare in the seventies."< /p>

Idiom 10: Jinse Years

Source: Tang Dynasty Li Shangyin's "Jinse" poem: "Jinse has fifty strings for no reason, one string and one column think of the golden years."

Idiom 11: A bird covers a dangerous nest

Source: Tang Dynasty Li Shangyin's poem "Xingci Zhaoying County Road": "The fish swims in the boiling cauldron and knows that there is no day, but the bird covers the dangerous nest and waits for the wind." < /p>

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