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<>辕 [yuán]: two straight logs for driving livestock in front of a car; In the old days, it referred to the outer door of the military camp and the official office, and it was borrowed to refer to the government office.
辙 [zhé]: the trace of wheel pressure.
Pronunciation: 南辕北辙 [nán yuán běi zhé] Interpretation: I want to go south but the car is heading north. The metaphor is the opposite of action and purpose.
Sentence formation: Only when the goal is clear, will it not go in the opposite direction.
Their personalities are so different that they can't talk about it at all.
Now my way of life is completely different from what I originally envisioned, and it has nothing to do with it.
He didn't do what the teacher said, so he didn't get his goal at all.
After talking for most of the day, the opinions of the two people were still at odds and could not be coordinated.
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The yuan in the north and south refers to the car, steel, and the car, which refers to the traces left by the wheel.
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1. Nanyuan Beizi, a Chinese idiom, pinyin is nán yuán běi zhé, I want to go south but the car goes north. The metaphor is that action and purpose contradict each other. Wheel: two straight logs for driving livestock at the front of the car; Traces of wheels running over the ground.
2. Source of the idiom: "Warring States Policy: Wei Ce IV": "It is still to Chu and go north." ”
3. Idiom usage: as an object, a definite; Derogatory.
4. Synonyms: going against the grain, seeking fish from the wood, backfiring, ascending the mountain and pearling.
5. Antonyms: the same, the same step.
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1. The two straight logs in front of the car to drive livestock. The rut in the north:
Traces of wheel pressure. 南辕北辙 pronunciation: nán yuán běi zhé, paraphrased:
It means that the mind wants to go south but the car is going north. The metaphor is that action and purpose contradict each other.
2. Allusion: The king of Wei wanted to attack Zhao, and Ji Liang persuaded him: I met a man on the road who was driving north, and I told him:
Although your horse is good and the road expenses are sufficient, this is not the way to Chu! If the direction is wrong, the better the conditions for the journey, the farther away from the state of Chu will be. If you want to dominate the princes, you should not rely on the strength of the country to attack small countries.
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The two straight logs in front of the car to drive the livestock. The rut in the north:
Traces of wheel pressure. 南辕北辙 pronunciation: nán yuán běi zhé, paraphrased:
It means that the mind wants to go south but the car is going north. The metaphor is that action and purpose contradict each other.
The king of Wei wanted to attack the state of Zhao, but Ji Liang persuaded him: I met a man on the road who was driving north, and I told him: Although your horse is good and the road expenses are sufficient, this is not the way to the state of Chu!
If the direction is wrong, the better the conditions for the journey, the farther away from the state of Chu will be. If you want to dominate the princes, you should not rely on the strength of the country to attack small countries.
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1. The rut is the trace left by the car returning to the mainland.
2. The opposite of the other: I want to go to the south to close the world and disturb the south, but the car is going north. Figurative action is the opposite of the purpose of the sedan chair.
3, from Liu Xiang's "Warring States Policy: Wei Ce" in the Western Han Dynasty: "With the name of Guangdi, the more the king's movements are few, and the farther away from the king." It is still to Chu and go north.
"Warring States Policy" is a country-specific history book. It mainly describes the political propositions and strategies of the Zonghengjia in the Warring States Period, shows the historical characteristics and social features of the Warring States Period, and is an important classic for the study of the history of the Warring States Period.
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1. Yuan refers to the wheel.
2. The idiom is a metaphor for the opposite of action and purpose. Derogatory. It is generally used as a definite sentence and an object.
3. Idiom stories.
During the Warring States Period, there was a person who was going to the State of Chu. He drove the carriage and galloped on the Taihang Road.
On the way, he met a fellow traveler, and the two started talking, and when the fellow traveler learned that he was going to Chu State, he was surprised and asked him: "Chu is in the south, why do you go north?" If you go this way, when will you be able to reach the Chu State?
If you go this way, you will get farther and farther away from the Chu State. The man pointed to his luggage and said, "I have a lot of money and dry food for the journey, which can be used for many days.
The fellow traveler said anxiously: "You are wrong, you will not be able to reach the Chu State if you go this way." The man said confidently
My driver is very good at driving and doesn't have to worry about renting. Seeing that this person was so confused, the fellow traveler shook his head helplessly and sighed.
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Yuan: two straight logs for driving livestock in front of the car.
This idiom comes from "Warring States Policy: Wei Ce IV". Originated from a fable, it is about a person who wants to go to the state of Chu, but as a result, he walked in the opposite direction and did not listen to the advice, and as a result, he became farther and farther away from his destination.
It means that the mind wants to go south but the car is going north. The metaphor is the opposite of action and purpose.
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The meaning of "yuan": two straight logs for driving livestock in front of the car; The meaning of "rut" is the mark left by the wheel on the road.
This idiom comes from "Warring States Policy: Wei Ce IV": "It is still to Chu and to the north." (Meaning:.)
Isn't this the same as the person I met today who wanted to go to Chu but went north? )。It is about a person who wants to go to the Chu State, but as a result, he walked in the opposite direction and did not listen to the advice, and as a result, he was getting farther and farther away from his destination.
In the opposite direction, it refers to the vehicle. I wonder if you've ever seen a cart pulled by oxen. The two bars in front of the car are the axles of the car.
A rut is a rut, and a rut is a rut. Instead, drive the car south, but it turns out to be north. It's a metaphor where the action goes against the end, and the result and the goal are getting farther and farther away.
This idiom is based on a legendary story about a man who wants to go to the state of Chu. As a result, the bronze hugs of the long yellow petals of the cypress went in the opposite direction and did not listen to the advice. As a result, it is getting farther and farther away from its destination.
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The meaning of the South and the North is that:
"Yuan" is a car bar; "Ruts" are the marks left by the wheels on the road. The rut is to the south, and the rut is to the north.
The opposite of the south: go to the Chu state in the south but go north. The metaphor is the opposite of the action and the end.
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I don't know if you have ever seen a car pulled by an animal, and the two bars in front of the car are the wheels. Ruts refer to ruts, which means the marks of the wheels. The opposite means that you want to pull the cart to the south, but you end up going north.
The metaphor is that the action and the end are opposite, and the result and the goal are getting farther and farther apart. This idiom comes from a fable, which is about a person who wants to go to the state of Chu, but as a result, he walks in the opposite direction and does not listen to the advice, and as a result, he is getting farther and farther away from his destination.
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Yuan Yuan means two straight logs in front of the car, facing the direction of the car. In this idiom, the person who drives the car originally meant to go to the north, but the direction of the drive was just the opposite, facing the south, hoping to adopt :)
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Two long, sturdy wooden strips on either side of the car. It's called Yuan. Its role is to put a horse-drawn cart in the middle of it.
A rut is a mark on the ground that has been pressed out by a wheel.
There is a saying that there is a car in front and a rut in the back. That's what it means.
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The "yuan" of this idiom is a car bar; "Ruts" are the marks left by the wheels on the road. The rut is to the south, and the rut is to the north.
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Figuratively the opposite of the purpose. Yuan to the south idiom story (7 photos) "South to the north" of this idiom "Yuan" is a car bar; The "rut" is the mark left by the wheel on the road, and as a result, it is farther and farther away from the target, and the rut goes north.
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