-
The dangerous building is 100 feet high" from Li Bai's "Night Stay in the Mountain Temple".
The dangerous building is 100 feet high, and you can pick the stars by hand.
I dare not raise my voice, for fear of frightening the people in heaven.
This is a song that does not rhyme, rhymes with the five uniques of the "eleven true" part of the water rhyme, and the last sentence "Fear the heavenly people", using the lonely flat to save himself, from "Ping Ping Qi Ping."
The change has become "Ping Ping Ping", which can be regarded as a legal work.
Li Bai's work is deeply rooted in the hearts of the people because of its concise words and exaggerated imagery. But because of this, there are many versions in history, and there are also many versions of the author, including Li Bai, Wang Yuyan, Yang Yi, and Yan Shu.
Meng Guan and other sayings. However, Li Bai's statement is generally adopted, which is like Wang Wei.
's "Acacia", because of its popularity, has been constantly revised over the years, but we still think it is Wang Wei's work.
-
The dangerous building is 100 feet high" from "Night Stay in the Mountain Temple", the author of the poem is Li Bai, a great poet of the Tang Dynasty, also known as "poet immortal".
-
This poem is the work of the Tang Dynasty romantic poet Li Bai, and the poem is called "Night Stay in the Mountain Temple". The full poem is as follows:
The dangerous building is 100 feet high, and you can pick the stars by hand.
I dare not raise my voice, for fear of frightening the people in heaven.
-
"A hundred feet high in a dangerous building" is from "Staying at the Mountain Temple at Night". 2. Original text: "Staying in the Mountain Temple at Night" Li Baiwei is a hundred feet high, and he can pick the stars with his hands. I dare not raise my voice, for fear of frightening the people in heaven. 3. Translation.
-
The dangerous building is 100 feet high, and it is from Li Bai's overnight stay in the mountain temple.
The poem "Staying in the Mountain Temple at Night" was selected as a primary school Chinese textbook, and it is generally considered to be the work of Li Bai, a great poet of the Tang Dynasty. This poem uses extremely exaggerated techniques to describe the towering buildings in the temple, expressing the poet's amazement at the ancient temple engineering art and his yearning and pursuit of a fairy-like life.
The language of the poem is simple and natural, the imagination is magnificent, exaggerated and ingenious, and vivid, giving people a rich sense of association and immersion.
-
100 feet high" from "Staying at the Mountain Temple at Night".
The dangerous building is 100 feet high, and you can pick the stars by hand.
I dare not raise my voice, for fear of frightening the people in heaven.
It is a five-character quatrain.
The author is the Tang Dynasty romantic poet Li Bai.
-
The dangerous building is 100 feet high, and you can pick the stars with your hands, and you dare not speak loudly, for fear of frightening the people in the sky.
This is a poem by Li Bai, called Night Stay in the Mountain Temple.
-
Overnight in Hanshan Temple Li Bai's full poem is: The dangerous building is 100 feet high, and you can pick the stars with your hands. I dare not raise my voice, for fear of frightening the people in heaven.
-
Li Bai's overnight stay in Hanshan Temple The whole poem is: The dangerous building is 100 feet high, and you can pick the stars with your hands. I dare not raise my voice, for fear of frightening the people in heaven.
-
Overnight at the mountain temple. Li Bai Tang Dynasty
The dangerous building is 100 feet high, and you can pick the stars by hand.
I dare not raise my voice, for fear of frightening the people in heaven.
-
Overnight at the mountain temple. Tang ] Li Bai.
wēilóugāobǎichǐ
The dangerous building is 100 feet high, and shǒukězhāixīngchén can pick the stars with his hands.
bùgǎngāoshēngyǔ
Don't dare to speak loudly, kǒngjīngtiānshàngrén is afraid of the heavenly people.
-
The danger of a dangerous building with a height of 100 feet means "high".
Pinyin: wēi
Interpretation: 1Dangerous; Unsafe (as opposed to "Ann"): Critical. Distress. Turn the corner. Be prepared for danger in times of peace.
2.put in danger; Damage: Hazard. Endanger.
3.Refers to the imminent death of a person: in danger. Be critically ill.
4.High; Towering: Dangerous crown. Dangerous. Dangerous.
5.Proper; Integrity: Sit upright.
6.One of the Twenty-Eight Nights.
7.Surname. Strokes:
-
Dangerous Building: High-rise building, here refers to a temple built on the top of a mountain.
100 feet: imaginary finger, not a real number, here describes the building is very high.
Stars: A collective term for the stars in the sky. Fear: I'm afraid.
-
This is Li Bai's poem, the dangerous building is 100 feet high, and you can pick the stars with your hands. This refers to a very high meaning. It's a very tall building.
-
1. Meaning: The tall buildings of the temple on the mountain are really high, as if there are 100 feet, and people on the upper floor seem to be able to pick up the stars in the sky as soon as they stretch out their hands. Standing here, I didn't dare to speak out loud for fear of alarming the gods in the sky.
2. Original poem: Overnight stay in the mountain temple
Tang Dynasty Li Bai. The dangerous building is 100 feet high, and you can pick the stars by hand.
I dare not raise my voice, for fear of frightening the people in heaven.
3. Expression: It expresses that the taller the person stands, the more cautious he must be, and he can raise his hand to pick up the stars in this position, but he must also be careful and serious. In general, it expresses expectations and caution for the future, and is very bold and open-minded.
It is necessary to see the good side, not the side of "dangerous buildings". Suihong should also face it with an optimistic and positive attitude and see more good aspects.
-
1. The dangerous building is 100 feet high, and the envy comes from Li Bai's "Night Stay in the Mountain Temple".
2. Original text: The dangerous building is 100 feet high, and you can pick the stars by hand. I dare not raise my voice, for fear of frightening the people in heaven.
-
The dangerous building is 100 feet high.
Hands can pick the stars.
Don't dare to speak loudly.
Horror of the heavens.
Tang Li Bai "Yebo Mountain Temple".
Some people believe that the title of the poem should be a mistake of "Staying at the Mountain Temple at Night", because there is not a single word in the poem that mentions the scene related to Bo.
Writing the height of the building in danger, it is a bit precarious, as if it will fall at any time, and the feeling is that it is a fantasy to see the truth. The next three sentences all exaggerate the scene of being in a high building: you can pluck the stars with your hand, and you are more sincerely afraid, not daring to speak loudly, for fear of waking up the immortals in the sky.
This poem can be said to fully reflect Li Bai's amazing imagination. In fact, the high-rise buildings in ancient times were not as good as today's skyscrapers, and today, being at the top of the skyscrapers, or the highest floor of the Oriental Pearl, is really the ability to pick the stars....Horror of the heavens.
Meaning: Even if there are precious hundred-foot coral and thousands of pearls, it is difficult to exchange her for being unmarried. >>>More
Go one step further", from a Buddhist allusion.
According to the Song Dynasty Shi Puji's "Five Lantern Huiyuan" records, there was a high monk named Sun Dig manuscript Jingcen, called Zhaoxian Master, whose Buddhist attainments are extremely high, and are often invited to preach and preach the scriptures from all over the world. One day, when he was invited to give a lecture at a Buddhist temple, a monk asked him to answer a question about the highest state of Buddhism, the world of the ten directions. In order to explain what is going on in the world of the ten directions, the master of Zhaoxian sang a verse on the spot: >>>More