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There is a head and no tail, and the afterword about tadpoles is as follows:Qingwa laughed at the tadpole ——— forgot where she came from.
Tadpoles look for their mother——— they don't look like anyone; It's not like looking for anyone.
Tadpoles have feathers tied to their tails ——— pose as big-tailed grass chickens.
Tadpoles surf the Internet ——— catch big heads.
Tadpoles hunt ducks ——— look for death.
Tadpoles gather ——— tail more.
Tadpoles aggregate ——— have many tails.
Tadpoles are good-looking——— with large tails; Great.
Tadpoles suffer from headaches ——— are sick all over the body; Sick all over.
The tadpole runs after the fish——— don't die.
Classification of after-break wordsAfterwords are a type of idiom. Most of the witty and vivid sentences that are familiar to the masses can be used to hide the later text and indicate the previous text, such as only saying "chess is played on the Go board" to show that the wrong way is done; It can also be juxtaposed with the context, such as "sesame seeds bloom and grow taller".
There are usually two types of afterwords.
1. The original meaning of the post-break language, such as calling "father-in-law" as "dragon head crutch", alluding to the word "stick", here instead of "zhang".
2. The afterword that expands the meaning is called a witty word in Beijing, which means that the second half of a sentence can be omitted. For example, "horsetail tofu" omits "can't lift it". Sometimes homophones are also used. For example, "the nephew hits the lantern as usual (uncle)".
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The frog at the bottom of the well - I don't know how thick the sky is;
The frog at the bottom of the well - short-sighted;
The frog at the bottom of the well - shallow knowledge;
The frog at the bottom of the well - I can't see much of the sky;
The Frog at the Bottom of the Well - I have never seen the sky.
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Sitting in the well and watching the sky, one by one short-sighted.
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Frogs, have you ever seen them? What kind of sound does a frog make when it jumps into a well? Do you know the answer to the frog jumping into the well? I'll bring you the answers, and you're welcome to learn.
Plop (don't understand).
Frogs in February – croaking.
The serpent eats frogs – does not spit out bones; Uncritically.
Frog in the pond – can sing.
The lame frog touches the blind chicken - the difficult brother meets the bright Zen Feng difficult brother.
The lame frog touches the blind mortar chicken - the brother meets the brother.
Frogs after a rainstorm – loud noise.
Catching snakes and frogs - not respecting the industry; Don't get down to business.
Field pheasant (frog) in the net bag - blind touch; Blinding.
Frog walks – jumping and jumping; Jumping and jumping.
Frog meets chicken - meets his own family.
Frogs fall in love – noisy.
Frogs are tethered to the tip of the whip - not worth beating.
The frog sings – quacks.
Frog Laughing Tadpole – Forget where you came from.
The frog looks at the jade rabbit - there is a difference between heaven and earth.
Frog jumping into the pond - don't understand (plop).
The frog climbs onto the tip of the whip – it can't stand the beating.
The frog jumps to the hot pan ( — o pancake cooker. iron round flat bottom).
Frogs crawl on their feet – do not bite.
Frog Pond – Noisy.
Frog Drum – Out of tune.
Frogs wear trousers - kicks and kicks; You can't kick it off.
Tadpoles turn into frogs – with heads but no tails.
Frog at the bottom of the well - has never seen the world; I don't know how high the sky is and how thick it is.
The frog with a broken leg – can't run (a metaphor for a task or something that is safe and secure.) Winter frog – hide.
The lame frog touches the blind field chicken - the brother meets the brother.
Frogs with legged legs – can't jump.
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1. Frog diving - plopping; I don't understand.
1. Tumbler tea - no level.
2. Take advantage of the water to step on the sunken ship - help others for evil.
3. Begging for food with water on his back - pretending to be poor.
4. Ink on the white mud wall - stains.
5. Cover a pigsty in the paddy field - the fertilizer water does not flow into the field of outsiders.
6. Wash your hair with Coptis water - self-inflicted distress; Self-inflicted misery.
7. Open the water in the floodgates - roll forward.
8. Don't turn off the faucet when you fetch water - let it flow freely: let it flow freely.
9. Quilt? Water – aggravated.
10. Take advantage of the water and mud, and strike the iron while the fire - kill two birds with one stone.
11. Two sewers meet - the same stream and pollution.
12. Learn to swim before entering the water - there is a river that cannot be crossed; Why can't you get by?
13. The textbook fell into the water tank - lost (wet) karma (page).
14, A Qing's sister-in-law pours tea - not leaking.
15. Eggs in cold water - can't come up.
16. End water tank to fight fires - it is not a small effort, and the harvest is not big.
17, duckweed on the water - can't sink; Drift in the wind.
18. Red potion for stomach pain - it doesn't work.
19. Dirty water is poured into the pit - the more noisy it is, the more stinky it is.
20. Plasterer gives gifts - can't reach out.
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