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1. Overwork becomes a disease.
Pronunciation: jī láo chéng jí
Explanation: I got sick due to long-term work and overwork.
Source: Ming Feng Menglong, "Chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty".
Chapter 69: "The grandson is born; Breakdown from constant overwork; unable to get up from a lying down; The city is exhausted;
Half of those died of starvation; The defenders are tired; Cannot defend against enemies. ”
2. Terminally ill.
Pronunciation: bìng rù gāo huāng
Explanation: Describes the condition as severe and incurable. The metaphor is that things have reached the point where they cannot be saved.
Source: "Zuo Chuan: Ten Years of Chenggong": "Doctor; He said, 'You can't do anything about it. on top of the belly; Under the anointing; It is impossible to attack; Reach.
Not as well; The medicine is not cured; Don't do it either. ’”
3. The wood is about to die.
Pronunciation: xíng jiāng jiù mù
Explanation: It means that the life span of a person is not long, and he is about to enter the coffin.
Source: "Zuo Chuan: Twenty-three Years of the Duke of Xu": "I have been twenty-five years old, and if I marry if I do, I will be wooden." ”
4. Exhausted body and mind.
Pronunciation: shēn xīn jiāo cuì
Explanation: Weakened and lacking in spirit.
Source: Shi Sanyou.
Jinling Yeshi Tan Xinpei.
's swan song": "Because Tan Xinpei, who is physically and mentally exhausted, has been ill since then.
Passed away. ”
5. Physical and mental intercourse.
Pronunciation: shēn xīn jiāo bìng Explanation: Physically and mentally sleepy.
Source: "Nothing more".
As for me; The year before last, he was forty-five years old; and has long been physically and mentally ill; It doesn't seem to be necessary.
Precious life; Think about it and take precautions. ”
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The disease is not curable. Pronunciation: bìng rù gāo huāng
Interpretation: paste, apical fat for paste; Urepha, between the heart and the diaphragm; Between the plasters is the place where the medicine is not powerful. It means that the illness is serious and cannot be cured, which is a metaphor for the point that things have reached the point where they cannot be saved.
Plaster: In ancient times, the fat at the tip of the heart was used as the ointment, and the heart and the diaphragm were the ointment, and the place between the ointment was not the place where the medicinal power was not reached. It refers to the fact that the disease has become so critical that it cannot be cured, and it is also a metaphor for the fact that things have reached the point of no return.
1. Spring and Autumn Lu. Zuo Qiu Ming's "Zuo Chuan: Ten Years of Chenggong":"You can't do anything about it, it's above it, under the ointment, you can't attack it, you can't reach it, you can't do it, you can't do it. "
2, Yuan Anonymous's "Xiao Zhang Tu" first fold:"The mother is terminally ill, and your child looks up to the sky and sorrows"
3, Jin Wang Ruoxu, "Wang Nei Hanzi Duan's Poems Recently Steeply Feel No Good Thoughts" poem:"After years of hard work, it is not easy to engrave when you are terminally ill. "
4, Ming Luo Guanzhong's "Romance of the Three Kingdoms" Chapter 52:"I view Liu Qi is too wine-colored, terminally ill, and now his face is thin, wheezing and vomiting blood; But in half a year, they will die. "
5, Qing Pu Songling "Liao Zhai Zhi Wei Lotus Fragrance":"He choked up for a long time, confessed his sins, but begged for salvation. Lian said:'Terminally ill, there is no way to help. '"
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Flooded. Sparks burn the prairie fire.
Fever becomes a problem. Recuperate.
Recuperation is like raising a tiger.
A minor illness is not a big one.
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The disease is not curable.
bìng rù gāo huāng
Explanation] Anointing: The ancients called the fat at the tip of the heart "ointment", and the relationship between the heart and the diaphragm was called "ointment". Described as a very serious illness that cannot be treated. The metaphor is that things have reached the point where they cannot be saved.
Structure] subject-predicate.
Usage] mostly used for people; Also used for things. When metaphorically referring to things, it has a derogatory connotation. It is generally used as a predicate and a definite.
Zhengyin] 肓; It cannot be pronounced as "mánɡ".
Identification] 肓; Can't write "blind".
synonyms] human life is in danger, and the line is dying.
Antonyms] wonderful hand rejuvenation, hand to disease removal.
discernment] and "incorrigible"; All described the illness as severe; There is no cure. But the emphasis is on "disease"; It is also a metaphor for the seriousness of the situation; irretrievable; "Incorrigible" focuses on "rescue" and "medicine"; The metaphor is very flawed; irretrievable; And the scope of application is relatively wide.
Example sentences] due to the mother ; This new fighter was listless all day; Tea and rice do not think.
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Incurable disease: A disease that cannot be cured. It is also a metaphor for an irremediable calamity.
Psychosomatic Communication: Communication: Simultaneously; Sickness: exhaustion; Sleepy. Physically and mentally exhausted.
Illness must not be: disease: disease; For: Governance. The disease is incurable.
Unable to afford to get sick: After getting sick, the condition worsens day by day, and eventually he dies.
Dying: Describes the appearance of weak breathing and about to die. It is also a metaphor for the decay and decline of things, and the imminent destruction.
Terminally ill: Terminal: the name of ancient medicine in China; The fat at the tip of the heart is called "ointment"; The area between the heart and the diaphragm is called "belly".
In ancient times, it was believed that "anointing" was a place where the power of medicine could not be reached. Later, the condition was described as severe to the extent that it could not be **. It is also a metaphor for the seriousness of the situation; irretrievable;
It is also called "the sick are terminal".
Incorrigible: The metaphor is so bad that it can't be saved.
Head Broken Bleeding: The head is broken and bleeding all over the face. It is often used to describe a fiasco.
Peel Flesh Bloom: Crack: Split. The flesh and skin are cracked. Described being severely injured by the beating.
Sore: Trauma. Eyes full of trauma. The parable is a scene of calamity before all that is seen before the eyes.