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work" in classical Chinese expression:
1. "Labor".
To work means to work, as to work hard. The understanding of labor is different now and in the past. In the old days, "labor" referred to elementary school students taking handicraft classes or performing simple manual labor. Now it refers to manual labor operations in general.
For example, Li Dazhao's "From Vertical Organization to Horizontal Organization": "All those who work are noble and sacred. ”
2. "Making a living".
This sentence comes from the tenth chapter of "Guiguzi". "Therefore, change things, make a living, make a living, discuss family planning, talk about life, say that life advances, advances and retreats, and retreats from the system, so as to control things. Therefore, one hundred things are one, and one counts. ”
This sentence explains: Therefore, change produces incidents, events lead to strategy, strategy needs planning, planning needs discussion, discussion leads to argumentation, and argument exists. It was abandoned, and a system was formed to restrain incidents.
3. "Seek work".
"Thing" refers to a career, and seeking a job refers to finding a job.
For example, "Wuyang Hou Fan Xu, Pei Ren also." Slaughtering dogs. —"Historical Records".
This sentence explains: Wuyang Hou Fan Xue is a native of Pei County, who makes a living by killing dogs and selling dog meat. Things are here equated with the noun "occupation".
4. "Dispatch" - being assigned a job position.
To send someone – means to send someone to do something.
Errand Servant - Assigned by the government to work on a construction site.
Messenger - Called by the foreman on the construction site.
Business travel – leaving the construction site to run errands alone.
5. "Karma" in ancient classical Chinese can also be interpreted as the meaning of "occupation". for the profession. ".
Specifically, you can refer to "the people sell tea, clothing, and food, which is no different from the farmer's farm." - Get rid of the "History of the Song Dynasty".
This sentence is explained to mean that there is no difference between the common people selling tea to support themselves and the farmers ploughing the fields to support themselves.
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There is usually no equivalent classical Chinese vocabulary. Pronunciation: usually [tōng cháng].
Definition: ordinary, ordinary.
Citation: Li Guowen, "Lunar Eclipse".
Usually she says 'me' and 'we', but this time there's a 'us' out of the orange rocks. ”
2. In the presence of other men, this tone is usually scoffed.
3. Online learning is usually gradual and requires students to concentrate.
synonyms: often, popular一. 常 [cháng cháng].
All the time, all the time.
Xie Juezai. 二、通通 [tōng sú].
Easy to understand. Ding ling.
In the Hospital": "Make up some popular books for the fighters to read. ”
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"Classical Chinese" is relative to "vernacular Chinese".
"Yan" means to write, express, record, etc.
Wenyan", that is, the written language, "Wenyan" is relative to the "oral language", and the "oral language" is also called the "vernacular".
The last "text" is the meaning of works, articles, etc., and it refers to the genre of literature.
In ancient China, there was a difference between expressing the same thing in oral language and in written language, for example, if you want to ask someone if they have eaten, in oral language, it is "Have you eaten?" And to express it in a book and in words, it is "Rice or not?" ”.
"Rice no" is classical Chinese. In ancient times, all articles were written in written language. Therefore, now we generally refer to ancient Chinese as "classical Chinese".
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Speak, speak, shout, shout, shout, groan, read, ask about pure failure, answer, reprimand, reprimand, scold, scold, shout, persuade, admonish, comment, discuss, speak, praise, comment, speak, praise, comment, praise, comment, praise, debate, narrative, praise, praise, cloud.
Clever words, good words, quick words, trembling words, euphemisms, alarmists, lies, persuasions, abbreviations, comments, angry rebukes, refutations, rebukes, insults, curses.
I've loved reading since I was a kid. The family was poor and had no money to buy books to read, so they often borrowed them from the people who collected them, copied them by hand, and agreed with them to return them on a date. In the very cold winter, the inkstones are covered with solid ice.
A general term for the classical Chinese before May Fourth (generally excluding "pun wen"). In the Han Dynasty, the official script was popular, so the font before the Qin Dynasty was called Guwen, specifically referring to the ancient text in Xu Shen's "Shuowen Jie Zi". >>>More
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Speechless. It turns out that writing a love letter also has to have a format.
"Classical Chinese" is relative to, but different from, "Vernacular Chinese". >>>More