What are the good words extracted from China's fables in Grade Three?

Excerpted from the third day of China's fable, there are stormy waves, passing away, surviving, calmness, carrion bones, self-sacrifice, bleaching and so on.

The good words in China's fables are: Ye Long, Fox Wei, painting a snake to add feet, a frog at the bottom of a well, carving a boat for a sword, dreaming, mending after the sheep dies, making a bow and snake shadow, pulling out a seedling to encourage birds, carving a boat for a sword, stealing a clock, buying a boat to return the pearl, and waiting for a rabbit.

Zheng people buy shoes, wise men suspect their neighbors, mantis catches cicadas, steals clocks, and does the opposite, encouraging signs, making up numbers, trying to solve problems, losing horses, contradicting themselves, fools moving mountains, casting pearls before swine, and so on.

Third grade idiom fable story

Third grade idiom fable: birds scare snakes.

Shi Yalou was a monk in the Tang Dynasty. He lived in a temple for a long time, burning incense and chanting. Other monks secretly played chess and slept in their spare time, but Shi Yalou bought inkstone, ink, pen and paper to practice calligraphy. Sometimes in the dead of night, he is still practicing hard.

"A bird scares a snake" describes the elegant font like a bird flying, and the brushwork is vigorous, even the snake is scared.

Third-grade idiom fable: all plants are soldiers.

All plants and trees are soldiers: treat all weeds and trees as enemy soldiers. Describe the panic and suspicious psychology when you are hit by some kind of blow.

During the Eastern Jin Dynasty, Fu Jian, the king of Qin, controlled northern China. In 383 AD, Fu Jian led 900,000 infantry and cavalry to attack the rulers in the south of the Yangtze River. Jin generals Xie Shi and Xie Xuan led eighty thousand troops to resist.