-
Playing an idiom is not a trivial.
It is neither equal to 3 nor equal to 4, so it is not three or four. Not being indecent means not being presentable, not being decent. Secondly, it can be guessed as picking three and four, which can be understood as picking 3 and 4 out of the 10 Arabic numerals from 0 to 9 to form a decimal number.
Idiom anagram is a kind of word game, and it is also a linguistic and cultural phenomenon unique to Chinese characters. It is mainly based on the characteristics of complex strokes, relatively independent sides, and changeable structural combinations, and uses a variety of methods such as clutching, increasing and lossing, pictograms, and understanding.
-
Neither 3 nor 4. To play an idiom, it is "not three or four".
不三不四, the Chinese idiom, pinyin is bù sān bù sì, in Shi Nai'an's "Water Margin", the meaning is not presentable and undecent.
1] Describe indecency or indecency;
2] In the I Ching, it symbolizes the right path and the great way.
It means that a person or a thing is not on the right path or the great road, and it means not doing the right thing. Most used as a derogatory term.
-
To play an idiom is, no three or four.
Hope it helps.
-
Hit an idiom?
Not three, not four
-
You can use the idiom "no-three-and-four".
-
One life (1314).
-
The (,) in (3,4) is between 3 and 4, so it is not three.
-
Guess the idiom is: no three, no four.
-
Guess the idiom should be "no three, no four".
-
Lose three and four.
Thirty-five in groups of fifty.
-
Answer: Upside down.
Explanation: Three, four: means clutter. Describe the disorder of speaking and doing.
-
Not three, not fourTwo are blocked by a point. It seems to be like a cowherd and a weaver girl.
-
No, no, no, no
-
Zhang San Li Four, Chao 3 Dusk Four, Upside Down Three, Lose Three Fall Four,
-
Not three, not four, upside down, three down, four, three down, four, low, three, four.
-
Not three, not four, lose three and fall four, and move towards three and twilight.
0+0=1 is an idiom that makes something out of nothing. >>>More
Guess the idiom one by one circle - riddle: remarkable. >>>More
When the head stick drinks dāng tóu bàng hè
Interpretation] dangtou: head-on; Drink: Shout loudly. It was originally a Buddhist term. Zen monks receive beginners with a blow to the head with a stick; or a loud shout; to test the other party's comprehension. Now it refers to violent means of shaking and awakening. >>>More
Idioms: Four Books and Five Classics.
四书五經 [sì shū wǔ jīng] [paraphrase] Four books: also known as the Four Sons, namely "University", "The Mean", "Analects", "Mencius"; The Five Classics: "Poems", "Books", "Rites", "Yi", "Spring and Autumn". >>>More
The door is full of birds.
mén kě luó què >>>More