-
Ouyang Xiu, "Preface to the Biography of Lingguan".
Approximate content: Speaking of the Later Tang Zhuangzong, when accepting his father's succession, because he was given three major tasks, destroying the Liang, destroying the Yan, and destroying the Khitan, he worked hard in the early stage and achieved remarkable results. Then the conclusion is that it is full of losses, humble benefits, and disasters accumulate in the slightest.
-
This seems to be a Western proverb, which means that a camel has become overwhelmed, and at this time, just put a straw on it, and it will crush it to death. It means that things have reached a tipping point where they can add any little bit of ground to their problems.
There is an article in the intensive reading of college English, which says that someone ran a long way to apply for a teacher, but along the way, and the situation during the interview made him feel very bad and depressed, and finally the principal of the school put forward a request, so that he could no longer bear it, and walked away, which was used at the time, saying that the principal's final request was the last straw on the camel. In the context of that time, it meant that you could no longer endure it, and you could no longer endure it.
-
Arabic fables. The gist of it is as follows: the master loaded an old camel with a lot of goods on its back, and when he saw that it did not snort, he wanted to see if it could carry some more, so he gently threw a straw on it, but unexpectedly, it was this straw that made the camel fall to the ground.
It was obviously not the last straw that broke the camel's back, but the unbearable weight that was already on its back. This parable is a metaphor for how a little increase in strength can cause great change under strong pressure.
-
It was the straw that broke the camel's back
Meaning, a camel thinks it has a lot of strength, and asks others to keep putting straw on its back, putting countless bundles of straw, but when its strength has reached the limit, it still refuses to admit defeat, and puts another one, and the camel falls
-
Self-improvement, hard-working, consistent.
1. Flying sand and stones, aiming for thousands of miles, without hesitation, and unswervingly ......
-
Take the lead, be upright, be fearless.
Angry bull fighting, angry sky, majestic mountains and rivers, majestic air.
Swallowing mountains and rivers, righteousness and awe-inspiring, dragons and tigers, obscurity.
-
Hanging camel on the stone idiom allusion: "Fayuan Zhulin" volume 66 records: Someone got a dead camel, skinning it and thinking that the knife was blunt. There was a whetstone upstairs, so I went upstairs to sharpen the knife, went downstairs to peel the skin, and went up and down, which was very troublesome.
Ups and downs: The camel's peaks are uneven.
-
Idioms in praise of camels:
Take the lead, be upright, be fearless.
Angry bull fighting, angry sky, majestic mountains and rivers, majestic air.
Swallowing mountains and rivers, righteousness and awe-inspiring, dragons and tigers, obscurity.
Charge into battle, glow with heroic posture, fight bravely, and take the lead.
-
Take the lead, be upright, be fearless.
Angry bull fighting, angry sky, majestic mountains and rivers, majestic air.
Swallowing mountains and rivers, righteousness and awe-inspiring, dragons and tigers, obscurity.
Charge into battle, glow with heroic posture, fight bravely, and take the lead.
-
There is a long way to go, and the cow will work hard and complain.
-
Hard work, hard work, heavy responsibility.
-
Self-improvement, hard-working, consistent.
1. Flying sand and stones, aiming for thousands of miles, without hesitation, and unswervingly ......
-
Take the lead, be upright, be fearless.
Angry bull fighting, angry sky, majestic mountains and rivers, majestic air.
Swallowing mountains and rivers, righteousness and awe-inspiring, dragons and tigers, obscurity.
-
Sweat blood. Gritty.
The benevolent are invincible. I feel embarrassed if it doesn't fit.
-
Hard. Hard working without complaint.
-
No hesitation and consistency.
-
Hard work, hard work, hard work, hunger, diligence.
1. Hard work and resentment, pronounced rèn láo rèn yuàn, is an idiom, which means that it is a metaphor for working hard and not being afraid of others complaining.
Source: Lao She's "Camel Xiangzi": "He worked hard all day long, but as he did it, he remembered it." ”
2. Renzhong Daoyuan is a Chinese word, pinyin is rèn zhòng dào yuǎn, which means a long distance. The metaphor is a great responsibility and a long-term struggle.
Source: Pre-Qin Confucius "Analects Taber": "Zeng Zi said: 'A scholar cannot fail to Hongyi, and there is a long way to go. Benevolence is its own responsibility, isn't it also important? Death is gone, isn't it far away? ’
Translation: Zeng Tzu said: "A person with a special social status and great ambitions cannot fail to be strong and courageous, because he has a great mission and a long way to go." Isn't it important to see the fulfillment of charity as one's mission? Isn't it far away when you don't stop until you die? ”
3. Endure hardship and hard work, pinyin chī kǔ nài láo, meaning: forbidden to withstand. Able to live a difficult life, but also able to withstand fatigue.
Source: *** "The Current Situation and the Tasks of the New Fourth Army": "And our New Fourth Army can bear hardships and stand hard work, not afraid of difficulties. ”
4. endure hunger, pinyin rěn jī ái è, idiom, endure hunger and cannot eat enough or cannot eat. Described as extremely poor.
Source: Yu Hua "Alive": "She carries a basket to dig wild vegetables every day, her body is already sick, and she is hungry every day. ”
5. Diligent and diligent, Chinese vocabulary, pinyin: qín qín kěn kěn, describes diligence and steadfastness. It also describes the appearance of diligence.
Source: *** "Overcoming the Current Bad Tendencies in the Southwest Party": "In case of trouble, we discussed together, decided together, worked diligently, and as a result, things were done very well and were respected by others." ”
-
Hard working without complaint.
Heavy responsibilities. Hard.
Dine with Duke Humphrey. Desert oasis.
-
Camel fart – crooked.
-
The emaciated camel is bigger than the horse、Hehe、,,
-
Take the lead, be upright, be fearless.
Angry bull fighting, angry sky, majestic mountains and rivers, majestic air.
Swallowing mountains and rivers, righteousness and awe-inspiring, dragons and tigers, obscurity.
Charge into battle, glow with heroic posture, fight bravely, and take the lead.
-
The ship of the desert is self-reliant, enduring humiliation and burden, and is consistent.
"The last straw that crushed the camel" in love life I think this is not an excuse, but there has been a rift for a long time, no one will say that a relationship is suddenly terminated for no reason, but slowly disappointed in this relationship, and then explodes at a certain point, leading to the termination of the relationship. >>>More
<> as a child, in a family, if our parents give him love, after conveying the wrong message, he may give the child a kind of pressure, and this pressure is the last straw that crushes the child, so sometimes don't blindly think that the pressure on the school or society to the child is particularly great, in fact, when the parent's education, the parent's love can not be given to him correctly, the pressure on the child, the impact on the child is also very large. >>>More
The idioms for learning in the first year of junior high school are as follows: >>>More
Hindsight --- a chess term that borrows an outdated move. >>>More
The wind comes from the ground, the bloody rain, the breeze on both sleeves, the majesty on all sides, the wind on all sides, the spring breeze on the face, and the wind on the tree. >>>More