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Correctly pull the seedlings to grow. 揠 yà
pulling: pulling seedlings to promote growth (zh僴g ) (also known as "pulling seedlings to promote growth").
偃 yǎn falls on the back, put down: 偃卧. Servant. Yan Yang (pitching, metaphor to cope with the custom). Cease all activities.
Stop: Breathe. Give up the sword for the pen.
Ancient with "weir", embankment.
Weir yàn dam that retains water: embankment. Weir pond. Dujiangyan (in Sichuan Province, China, is a well-known ancient water conservancy project at home and abroad, with a history of more than 2,000 years).
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Idiom Seedlings are fueled.
pronunciation: yà miáo zhù zhǎng
Interpretation] pull: pull up. Pull up the seedlings to help them grow. Later, it is used as a metaphor for violating the law of development of things, rushing to achieve results, but bad things.
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Pulling seedlings to promote is the correct answer, and also to do pulling seedlings to help, in front of it is a verb, so it is next to the handle.
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It should be the seedlings that help it.
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Seedlings are promoted. If you don't believe it, go back and look up the dictionary w
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Seedlings are promoted.
Explanation]: Pull: pull. Pull up the seedlings to help them grow. The metaphor violates the objective law of the development of things, rushes to achieve results, and instead makes things worse.
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Seedlings are promoted.
Original text] The Song people have Min Qimiao's people who do not grow and rub it, Mangmang returns, and he said: "Today's illness will help the seedlings grow!" His son tended to look at it, and the seedling was gone.
Excerpt from Mencius. Gongsun Chou Chapter I).
Translation] There was a Song man who thought that his crops were growing slowly, so he pulled up the seedlings one by one. He returned home exhausted and said to his family, "I'm tired today, I'm helping the crops grow taller!" And his son hurried into the field to see that the seedlings had withered.
From the perspective of dialectical materialism, the story of the seedlings reveals the objectivity of the law. The movement of things is regular, and its existence and action are not subject to human will. This objectivity is epitomized in its irresistibility.
When people do not violate it, they do not seem to feel its existence, and if they act against the requirements of the law, they are punished. In addition, from the perspective of materialist dialectics, the story also shows that to exert subjective initiative, it is necessary not only to respect objective laws and conditions, but also to accumulate more subjective factors such as scientific knowledge and scientific methods in order to achieve the desired goal.
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The meaning of pulling seedlings to help them grow: pull the seedlings up to help them grow. The metaphor goes against the law of development of things, rushes to get things done, and instead makes things worse.
Source: Mencius "Mencius: Gongsun Choushang": The Song people have pity for those who do not grow their seedlings, and they return to Mangran, saying that their people say: "Today's illness will help the seedlings grow!" His son tended to look at it, and the seedling was gone.
synonyms: reckless, unhurried, anxious, and in a hurry.
Antonyms: step-by-step, backward, step-by-step, ripe, and advantageous.
Pulling seedlings helps to form sentences
1. The practice of pulling seedlings to promote growth does not help much in this matter.
2. To learn the cultural knowledge of dismantling, we must take it step by step, and we must not rush to achieve success.
3. The education of students can neither be promoted by seedlings nor allowed to go freely.
4. Ignoring the physical needs of children, blindly letting them lie on the table to study, and not letting them rest on holidays, this is a kind of seedling promotion behavior.
5. Do things step by step, step by step, and help the seedlings grow, but it is easy to fail.
6. The method of adapting to the situation will make things successful; The practice of helping the commander of the seedlings will lead to the failure of the matter.
7. Learning should be gradual and approaching, and being in a hurry can only help the seedlings, and the gains outweigh the losses.
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Interpretation: Pull up the seedlings and help them grow, which is a metaphor for ignoring the development law of things, forcing quick success, and making things worse by touching filial piety. It is also used as "pulling out the seedlings to help them grow".
Source: "Mencius, Gongsun Choushang": "The world does not help the elderly. Those who think it is useless and give it up, and those who do not cultivate seedlings are also; Help the elderly, and the seedlings are also. It is not in vain, but it is harmful. ”
synonyms: Lack of speed.
Antonyms: go with the flow, take it slowly, let it go.
Example sentence: To learn cultural knowledge, we must take it step by step, and we must not rush to achieve success.
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Interpretation: The metaphor violates the law of development of things, rushes to achieve results, and finally backfires.
From: "Mencius, Gongsun Choushang". The original text is as follows:
The Song people have Min Qimiao's people who are not long and rub them, and Mangmang returns, saying that his people say: "Today's illness!" Help the seedlings grow! ”
Vernacular: There is a Song person, he is very much looking forward to the seedlings growing taller, so he went to the field to pull up the seedlings one by one, and he is very tired but very satisfied at the end of the day.
His son tended to look at it, and the seedling was gone. There are few elders in the world who do not help seedlings.
Vernacular: When his son heard this, he hurried to the field to see the seedlings, but the seedlings withered.
Those who think it is useless and give it up, and those who do not cultivate seedlings are also; Help the elderly, and the seedlings are also. It is not in vain, but it is harmful.
Vernacular: People who give up thinking that the seedlings are useless when they grow up are like lazy people who don't hoe the seedlings. The person who helps it grow in vain, like the person who pulls out the seedlings to help it, not only does it not do it good, but harms it.
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Once upon a time, there was a farmer in the Song Kingdom who thought that the seedlings in his field were growing too slowly, so he was worried all day long. One day, he went down to the field again with his hoe, and he felt that the rice seedlings did not seem to grow at all, so he thought hard about what could be done to make the rice grow a little taller.
Suddenly, he had an idea, and without hesitation, he rolled up his trousers and jumped into the paddy field, and began to pull each seedling a little higher. In the evening, the farmer finally finished what he thought was a clever masterpiece, and ran home triumphantly, and told his wife impatiently, "I have thought of a great idea to-day to make the rice seedlings in our field grow a lot."
The farmer's wife was skeptical, so she told her son to go to the field to see what was going on. When the son heard that the rice in the family had grown taller, he flew to the field to see it excitedly. At this time, he found that the rice seedlings were growing taller, but they were hanging low, and they were about to wither.
The metaphor violates the law of development of things; Rush one's fences; So something went wrong.
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The story of a farmer who thinks he is good at pulling up the seedlings, thinking that this will make them grow taller and taller, causing the seedlings to wither. Among them, "help" means to help.
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Pulling up the seedlings and helping them grow is later used as a metaphor for violating the law of development of things, rushing to achieve results, but bad things. It is also used as "pulling out the seedlings to help them grow".
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First of all, it is not a "weir", but "a pull", and it is also written as "pulling out the seedlings to grow".
Chinese idioms. In the ancient Song Kingdom (present-day Shangqiu), there was a peasant who always thought that the seedlings in the field grew too slowly. He walked around the field all day, squatting (dūn) down every once in a while, measuring with his hands whether the seedlings had grown taller, but the seedlings always seemed to be that tall.
What can be done to make the seedlings grow faster? He thought about it, and finally came up with a solution: "If I pull the seedlings to a high place, won't the seedlings grow a lot taller all of a sudden?"
As soon as he said it, he started to pull up the seedlings one by one. Pulling out the seedlings to help them grow, which is a metaphor for violating the objective law of the development of things, rushing for results, but doing bad things.
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Pulling seedlings to promote and pulling seedlings to promote growth are synonymous.
"Pull" is the same as "pull". The meaning of pulling out the seedlings to promote the growth and pulling out the seedlings to promote the growth is a metaphor for violating the objective law of the development of things, rushing to achieve results, and instead messing things up.
From: Warring States Mencius "Mencius: Gongsun Choushang": "The Song people have Min Qimiao's not long and troublesome people, and they are at a loss, and they say: 'Today's illness is smiling, and it will help the seedlings grow. His son tended to look at it, and the seedling was gone. ”
Translation: A Song man who was worried that his seedlings would not grow tall and pulled them up, he was very tired but very satisfied at the end of the day, and when he came home, he said to his family: "But I am tired, I have helped the seedlings grow taller!"
When his son heard this, he hurried to the field to see how the seedlings were doing, but the seedlings withered.
synonyms: backfire, pulling out seedlings to grow, not reaching speed, splitting the ridge and breaking the crane.
Antonyms: go with the flow, step by step.