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1. Capsule fireflies reflect the snow: use fireflies to illuminate the book, and read with the snow lighting. Describe diligent study and hard study 2 cantilever piercing strands: hang your hair on a beam and prick your thigh with an awl. Described as studying hard.
3. Wei compiles three uniques: Wei: cooked cowhide.
Wei editor: In ancient times, bamboo was used to write books, and bamboo compendiums were connected with cooked cowhide strips to make "Wei compilation". Three:
Repeatedly. Absolute: Broken.
After repeated study, the leather rope of the bamboo slips was broken many times. It refers to studying diligently and diligently.
4, Chengmen Lixue: Standing in front of Cheng Yi's door in the heavy snow, describing respecting teachers and seeking advice sincerely.
5. Chisel the wall to steal the light: chisel through the wall to lead the light. Described as a poor family and still studying hard.
6. Hanging books on horns: Hang the book on the horns and read the book while putting the cow. The metaphor is diligent and studious.
7. Day ploughing and night recitation: farming during the day and reading at night, describing grasping the time to study and reading diligently.
8. Log police pillow: Use log as a pillow, easy to wake up when you fall asleep, and you will not be lazy. Describe spurring yourself, diligent and unremitting. Embrace the ice in the cold in winter, hold the fire in the heat in summer: describe working hard and honing yourself.
9. Lie down and taste the gall: sleep on the firewood and grass, and taste the bitter gall before eating. It is a metaphor for hard work and self-motivation.
10. Breaking the kettle and sinking the boat: smashing the pot and scuttling the shipwreck. The metaphor is to make up your mind, to do whatever it takes, to the end.
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1: Capsule Firefly Night Reading 2: Chengmen Lixue.
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There are many idiom stories to study hard, such as:
Capsule firefly reflecting snow] chisel the wall to steal the light].
Smell the chicken and dance] head cantilever cone thorn strand].
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The story of hard study in ancient times: "Piercing the Wall and Guiding the Light": Piercing the wall and drawing light refers to the Western Han Dynasty Prime Minister Kuang Heng because of his poor family since he was a child, he did not have the conditions to enter the school, he helped people work during the day, and had no money to buy lamp oil at night, so he had to dig a hole in the earthen wall at home, borrow the light next door to read, and even go to the house with books to help for free in exchange for books, he studied hard and finally became the prince and young master in the period of Emperor Yuan of the Han Dynasty.
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1. Cantilever thorn strands: a metaphor for studying hard without sleep and food.
One of the protagonists of this idiom is Sun Jing of the Eastern Han Dynasty, and the other is Su Qin during the Warring States Period. Sun Jing hangs the beam, and Su Qin is piercing. At that time, it was easy to nap because I was reading a book in the middle of the night, so I didn't take a nap.
So Sun Jing tied one end of his hair with a rope and tied the other end to the beam, and when he took a nap, he would pull his hair and hurt, so that he would wake up. For the same nap, Su Qin stabbed his thigh with an awl to sober himself up.
2. I can't let go of the volume.
During the Three Kingdoms period, Lü Meng, the general of Wu, had no cultural knowledge, and Sun Quan encouraged him to learn history books and the art of war. Lu Meng always said that the army had a lot of things to do and had no time to study.
Lu Meng asked"But I don't know which books to read? "
Sun Quan listened, smiled and said:"You can first read some books on the art of war such as "Sun Tzu" and "Liu Tao", and then read some history books such as "Zuo Chuan" and "Historical Records", which are very beneficial for leading troops to fight in the future. "
Lü Meng listened to Sun Quan's words, and when he went back, he began to read and study, and since then he has not released the book and persevered. In the end, he became the chief general of Wu State, brave and strategic, and repeatedly performed miraculous feats.
3. Reading in the moon.
There was a scholar named Jiang Mi in Nanqi, who had to work during the day and only had time to read at night, but his family was poor and could not afford to buy a lamp, so he had to use the moonlight to read at night. Whenever he read that the moon was setting in the west, he would carry a ladder and rest it at the foot of the wall, and stand on the ladder to read, and the moonlight would gradually fall, and he would rise step by step, until he reached the roof.
Sometimes when he was tired of reading and accidentally fell off the ladder, he quickly got up, and even bothered to brush off the dirt on his body, climbed up the ladder again, and continued to read.
4. Listen to the scriptures.
In the Later Han Dynasty, there was a man named Chenggong, who was an orphan who herded pigs and sheep for people from the age of 8. Xu Zisheng, a villager, taught the Spring and Autumn Classic to hundreds of students. Once, when I was grazing in the palace, I heard the "Spring and Autumn Classic" when I was resting there, so I asked to stay and collect firewood for the students.
5. Chisel the wall to steal the light.
During the Han Dynasty, there was a person named Kuang Heng, who was diligent and studious. The family was very poor, and he had to work during the day so that he could study at night. But I can't afford candles, and when it's dark, I can't read.
At night, his neighbor's house lit candles to illuminate the house. He said to his neighbors, "If you want to read at night, but you can't afford to buy candles, can you borrow an inch of your house?"
Chang'e to the moon is very beautiful and technical.
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