What should I do if I poison my heart? What does it mean to fight poison with poison?

Updated on technology 2024-05-20
7 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Fighting poison with poison is to use a poison to attack a poison, which has the meaning of countering violence with violence

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    It is to drink dichlorvos and then drink some paraquat.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Fighting poison with poison is a kind of poison, and then attacking another poison.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    When you meet a bad person, you are worse than a bad person.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Fighting poison with poison, a Chinese idiom, pinyin is yǐdúgōngdú, which refers to the use of poisonous drugs to ** diseases caused by poison, and is later used in practical life, referring to the use of a certain bad thing to resist another bad thing, from Ming Tao Zongyi's "Dropout Record".

    Source of the idiom: Ming Tao Zongyi's "Dropout Record" volume 29: "The bones are aggressive, the snake horns are also, their sex is poisonous, and it can detoxify, and cover it with poison to attack poison." ”

    Idiom usage: more formal; as a predicate, a definite, an object; Derogatory.

    synonyms:-for-tat,-for-tat, eye-for-eye.

    Antonyms: undressing and pushing food, foaming each other.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    We all know that when poisoning, it can be detoxified with antidotes, and it can also be detoxified with poisons. Fighting poison with poison means figuratively using the contradiction of the bad thing itself to oppose the bad thing.

    As I said before, my nephew is more introverted and doesn't like to talk when he sees people. Then my family will deliberately take him to more crowded places. Today there was a race car on the edge of the village, and my mother and my sister and I took him to see the race car.

    When he first arrived, his whole body tensed, his fists clenched, and he was so frightened that he hid behind us when he saw the dog approaching.

    In fact, when I was young, I was also very timid, and I was very scared when I saw a dog. But as I get older, I get a little bolder. But in order to train my nephew, I told him:

    When you see a dog, squat down or bend down and pretend to pick up a stone, and the dog will run away. Or you can stand there and ignore it, and it will ignore you. After much persuasion, it will be better, although he pretends to be calm, but it is also better than being scared to hide behind us.

    I also took him a little closer to the car and showed him it. At first, I was also afraid, so I encouraged him: don't be afraid, we have a lot of people here, and they won't come to a crowded place. After saying it a few times, he was also a lot braver.

    After dinner tonight, my nephew and I played a game of eagle and chicken. I'm a chicken, he's an eagle, and my sister is a mother chicken. After a few laps, he didn't catch me, and then, my sister also fainted, so I ran in front by myself, and he chased after him, and finally ran to a crowded place, so that he could catch up.

    After that, he was asked to talk to people, and he said it very obediently (he didn't want to say it before). Unexpectedly, because he wanted to play the game of eagle and chicken, he invited my aunt to play with us at my encouragement (we didn't talk much before).

    In addition, the little nephew also went home from the alley twice, and there were two street lights in the alley (although there were street lights, it was still very dark); I had to go home with him before.

    I don't know if it's because I watched the car this afternoon and was inspired, but in short, I made a lot of progress today.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Fighting poison with poison, a Chinese idiom, pinyin is yǐdúgōngdú, which refers to the use of poisonous drugs to ** diseases caused by poison, and is later used in practical life, referring to the use of a certain bad thing to resist another bad thing, from Ming Tao Zongyi's "Dropout Record".

    Source of the idiom: Ming Tao Zongyi's "Dropout Record" volume 29: "The bones are aggressive, the snake horns are also, their sex is poisonous, and it can detoxify, and cover it with poison to attack poison." ”

    Idiom usage: more formal; as a predicate, a definite, an object; Derogatory.

    synonyms:-for-tat,-for-tat, eye-for-eye.

    Antonyms: undressing and pushing food, foaming each other.

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