On the question of the use of idioms, the question of language idioms

Updated on culture 2024-03-03
10 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Idiom: nuancedPronunciation: xì zhì rù wēi

    Meaning: It means that the description and performance are very delicate, and the details are fully expressed. It also refers to caring for the human body.

    In the United States, for example, television and newspapers show too many and too detailed stories of robbery, ** and other criminal activities, depicting them so vividly and in such detail that even children know how to emulate what they witness.

    carelessness pronunciation: cū xīn dà yi

    Meaning: coarse: coarse. It refers to being sloppy and not careful.

    Source: Qing Wenkang's "The Legend of Children's Heroes" Chapter 4: "Russia has been delayed for a long time; Suddenly, there was an idea; The realization in my heart will come: 'This is my carelessness. If I don't go in; How did she figure it out. ’”

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    1 The Initiator of the Lead Oak Warriors: The Founder of the Bad Ethos.

    Reform the old and make the new: remove the old and build the new.

    The correct one is B2 without a city and a house: a metaphor for a bad man who has no scheming and is frank.

    Once upon a time, it was used correctly.

    Choose B3 to fall short: A metaphor for a major event that only needs the last bit of manpower and material resources and cannot succeed (with regret).

    Success: When you are about to succeed, you are defeated (with regret) and choose A

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    It is indeed a mismatch, because the subject of the sentence is classical Chinese furniture, which is a dead thing.

    Can you say that this house is getting better?

    If you want to use the gradual improvement, then the subject should be the sales of classical Chinese furniture.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    The meaning of devastation is to describe the people in a state of extreme hardship. The synonym is "the people are not living".

    According to the meaning of the context, "in distress" should be filled in here, and the devastation of life is a derogatory term, which is inappropriate to put in a sentence.

    The meaning of getting an inch into a foot is: you have an inch, and you want to go one more foot. The parable is greedy for nothing, and if there is a small one, there is a big one.

    Synonyms are: insatiable, insatiable.

    It is a derogatory term.

    The original meaning of this sentence is: people want to do big things without laying a good foundation, and "inch by inch" cannot express this meaning well.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Because the above two idioms are derogatory. When used in a sentence, it will have a derogatory connotation of the subject, expressing the author's dislike, anger or disagreement with the subject. The above two sentences do not have this meaning.

    For example, the party often says: 1. The Kuomintang reactionaries started a civil war and caused misery!

    It's even easier to get an inch! Hehe, do it yourself.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    [Suffering], [Explanation]: The people are trapped in mud ponds and fire pits. Describe the people in a situation of extreme hardship.

    Inch into the foot]], explanation]: get an inch, and want to go in another foot. It refers to the lack of greed, and if there is a small one, it wants a big one. The metaphor is insatiable.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Souls: Lives refer to the common people, describing the extremely difficult environment in which people are in a period of political chaos. The context does not match.

    Give an inch and take a mile; A pejorative term that refers to wanting to get bigger after taking advantage of it. It doesn't fit the context of the rush to succeed,

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    a. Lives are devastated: people are trapped in mud ponds and fire pits. It also refers to the fact that the creature has been greatly harmed. Describe the people in a situation of extreme hardship.

    However, the phrase in the sentence refers to mere death, and does not mean to be greatly harmed, so this idiom cannot be used.

    B, inch into the foot: get an inch, but also want to go into another foot. It refers to the lack of greed, and if there is a small one, it wants a big one. The metaphor is insatiable.

    This idiom is derogatory and describes insatiable greed. And the sentence refers to people wanting to climb to the sky and build a castle in the sky in one step, which is not in line with it.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    Misery: refers to a period of political chaos in which people are in an environment of extreme hardship, and cannot be used for disasters or deaths in the ordinary sense.

    Gain an inch: The metaphor is insatiable, which is inconsistent with the meaning of greed and pleasure in the sentence.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Souls: Creatures: People; Tu:

    Moss; Charcoal: Charcoal fire. Charcoal:

    Sludge and charcoal fires. The people were trapped in mud and fire pits. It also refers to the fact that the creature has been greatly harmed.

    Describe the people in a situation of extreme hardship. Yushu** is not only more than 2,000 lives, but the entire disaster area.

    Inch inch: I got an inch, and I want to go in another foot. It refers to the lack of greed, and if there is a small one, it wants a big one. The metaphor is insatiable. It would be more appropriate to replace "inch by inch" with "disagree".

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