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The first word is all the idioms and explanations that begin with the word "挨":
Door-to-door - next: in order, in order. One family, no leakage.
Beaten and scolded—Yu Charged—Suffered. He was beaten, scolded and abused.
To be beaten and to be angry - to suffer: to suffer. Being beaten, scolded and abused.
Door-to-door - next to each other: in order. In the order of the householders, none of them were left behind. Same as "door-to-door".
Shoulder-to-shoulder – describes a crowded crowd.
Shoulder-to-shoulder – describes a crowded crowd.
Freezing and starvation – refers to the plight of being poor without food or clothing.
Surrounded by mountains and seas - describes a large number of people and overcrowded.
Three to five - to describe a large number of people, continuous connection.
Door-to-door – door-to-door, and not a single family was missed.
Shoulder-to-back – shoulder-to-shoulder: Shoulder-to-shoulder. Lap on the back: Put your hand on the back of someone else. Describe the appearance of extreme judgment and intimacy.
Rubbing your face side by side - next to you: close. Rub, touch. Describe the appearance of a nickname.
Shoulder to shoulder – to describe a lot of crowding.
Shoulder-to-shoulder – refers to being close to each other. It is also described as crowded.
Shoulder to shoulder – describes a crowded crowd.
Door-to-door – one household at a time, every household is not missing. Ly, sequentially, sequentially.
Caught in the wind - a metaphor for finding a way to achieve a certain goal.
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Freezing and starvation.
Caught in the wind. Door to door.
Shoulder to shoulder. Shoulder to shoulder.
Rub your back side by side. Shoulder to shoulder.
Shoulder to shoulder, betrayal of righteousness and ungratefulness, grace over motherhood, mother to the son of the noble, noble not to call arrogance, extravagance
Yichen is broken, martingale is unhappy, Lotte knows his fate, his fate is thin, he is beaten and scolded: suffered. Being beaten, scolded and abused.
To be beaten and to be angry - to suffer: to suffer. Being beaten, scolded and abused.
Freezing and starvation – refers to the plight of being poor without food or clothing.
Suffer from hunger and cold: suffer: suffer. It refers to the state of poverty without food and clothing.
Caught in the wind - a metaphor for finding a way to achieve a certain goal.
Door-to-door: every household, every household does not leak. Ly, sequentially, sequentially.
Door-to-door - next: in order, in order. One household, one household without missing shoulder to shoulder: describe the crowd as crowded.
Shoulder-to-shoulder – refers to being close to each other. It is also described as crowded.
Shoulder to shoulder: shoulder to shoulder, back to back. Describe a lot of people.
Rubbing your face side by side - next to you: close. Rub, touch. Describe the appearance of a nickname.
Shoulder-to-back – shoulder-to-shoulder: Shoulder-to-shoulder. Lap on the back: Put your hand on the back of someone else. Describe the appearance of extreme intimacy.
Shoulder-to-shoulder – describes a crowded crowd.
Shoulder-to-shoulder – describes a crowded crowd.
Door-to-door - next to each other: in order. In the order of the householders, none of them were left behind. Same as "door-to-door".
Door-to-door – door-to-door, and not a single family was missed.
Three to five - to describe a large number of people, continuous connection.
Surrounded by mountains and seas - describes a large number of people and overcrowded.
Beaten and scolded: suffered. Being beaten, scolded and abused.
To be beaten and to be angry - to suffer: to suffer. Being beaten, scolded and abused.
Freezing and starvation – refers to the plight of being poor without food or clothing.
Suffer from hunger and cold: suffer: suffer. It refers to the state of poverty without food and clothing.
Caught in the wind - a metaphor for finding a way to achieve a certain goal.
Door-to-door: every household, every household does not leak. Ly, sequentially, sequentially.
Door-to-door - next: in order, in order. One household, one household without missing shoulder to shoulder: describe the crowd as crowded.
Shoulder-to-shoulder – refers to being close to each other. It is also described as crowded.
Shoulder to shoulder: shoulder to shoulder, back to back. Describe a lot of people.
Rubbing your face side by side - next to you: close. Rub, touch. Describe the appearance of a nickname.
Shoulder-to-back – shoulder-to-shoulder: Shoulder-to-shoulder. Lap on the back: Put your hand on the back of someone else. Describe the appearance of extreme intimacy.
Shoulder-to-shoulder – describes a crowded crowd.
Shoulder-to-shoulder – describes a crowded crowd.
Door-to-door - next to each other: in order. In the order of the householders, none of them were left behind. Same as "door-to-door".
Door-to-door – door-to-door, and not a single family was missed.
Three to five - to describe a large number of people, continuous connection.
Surrounded by mountains and seas - describes a large number of people and overcrowded.
East and West: Describe no fixed target, running around. Same as "running around".
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Caught in the wind. It is said that many parties drill camp.
Plugging the sea with mountains. Describe a lot of people.
Crack the cracks. Multi-party drill camp.
Inside and out. Han Zhang Zhongjing's "Treatise on Typhoid Fever and Sun Disease": "Licorice Ganping has the ability to calm the inside and outside. "In terms of the efficacy of the drug. The latter mostly refers to stabilizing the interior and excluding external troubles.
Dark. There is no silver lining in sight. It is often described as political corruption and social darkness.
Boiling oil costs fire. It is said to consume lamp oil. Mostly refers to being busy day and night.
Eight Governors. The name of the patrol according to the Ming Dynasty, from the Ming Dynasty, is not a fixed official, temporarily appointed by the imperial court to supervise the imperial history, respectively, to inspect the provinces, and assess the governance of officials. "Eight Governors" are commonly seen in opera, **, and the people are mostly regarded as honest and powerful officials.
Eighty-four thousand. Originally, it was a Buddhist number that denoted a large number of things, and later it was used to describe a lot of things.
Pull out the original of Bense. Also known as "pulling out the source". The metaphor turns away from the roots. Eradicate the root cause of what happens. Used mostly for bad things.
Comes. Draw your sword to help. It mostly refers to righteousness and courage.
Stand out from the crowd. Above the rest. Multi-finger talent.
Hunger is the food. The metaphor is redundant.
White rainbow through the sun. The white rainbow passed through the sun. A rare halo phenomenon. The ancients believed that when something extraordinary happened in the world, this kind of celestial change would occur. Compare how white the eyes are.
White rabbit red black. A synonym for the moon and the sun. Borrow more time.
A hundred is not more, one is not less.
It is called a rare good person or good thing.
Hundreds of rivers face the sea. The waters rushed to the sea. It is a metaphor for a myriad of scattered things all in one place.
Never get tired of reading. Read it many times and don't get tired. Uttered Song Sushi's poem "Sending An Dun Xiucai to Lose and Return to the West": "Old books are not tired of reading hundreds of times, and they know themselves by reading them deeply." Later, he described the article as superb with "never tired of reading".
A lot to do. It is said that many abandoned businesses are waiting to be established.
Strange and strange. There are many ways to describe it.
A hundred schools of thought contend. It originally referred to the atmosphere of debate among academics during the Warring States period in China. At that time, there were many academic schools, and the famous ones were Confucianism, Law, Taoism, Mo, Ming, Yin and Yang, Vertical and Horizontal, Household Farming, and Miscellaneous.
They wrote books and made speeches, lobbied and argued, forming a situation in which "a hundred schools of thought contended." This situation played a great role in promoting the development of ideology, culture, and scholarship at that time. Later, it was used to refer to the method of expressing their opinions in academic research in order to develop.
Thousands of dollars. Abound.
Like mountains and seas. Numerous.
Numerous. The number of sands in the Ganges.
Tens of thousands. Millions upon millions.
Cover the sky. Overwhelmingly dazzling rental and shipping.
Numerous. Countless.
To be a dime a dozen. Numerous.
A dime a dozen is dazzling.
There are countless mountains and fields.
A drop in the ocean is piled up like a mountain.
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1. Suffer from cold and hunger [ái dòng shòu è] refers to the poor situation without food and clothing.
2. Door-to-door [āi jiā āi hù].
One by one.
3, 挨hunger受freeze pat socks [ái è shòu dòng] suffers: suffer. It refers to the state of poverty without food and clothing.
4. 挨山淚海 [āi shān sè hǎi] describes a crowded number of people.
5. Shoulder to shoulder [āi jiān dā bèi] shoulders next to each other, hands on each other's backs. Describe it as very intimate.
6. 挨风缉sew [āi fēng jī fèng] means multi-party drilling.
7. 挨三顶四 [āi sān dǐng sì] describes a large number of people and continuous connections, the same as "挨三顶五".
8. shoulder to shoulder and foot [āi jiān bìng zú] as a predicate, a definite, and an adverbial; Describe a lot of people.
9, shoulder to shoulder rub back [āi jiān cā bèi] 挨: approach. Rub, touch. Describe a large number of people, shoulders and backs touching each other.
10. 挨打受骂 [ái dǎ shòu mà] is beaten and abused.
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Beaten and scolded: suffered. Being beaten, scolded and abused.
To be beaten and to be angry - to suffer: to suffer. Being beaten, scolded and abused.
Freezing and starvation – refers to the plight of being poor without food or clothing.
Suffer from hunger and cold: suffer: suffer. It refers to the state of poverty without food and clothing.
Caught in the wind - a metaphor for finding a way to achieve a certain goal.
Door-to-door: every household, every household does not leak. Ly, sequentially, sequentially.
Door-to-door - next: in order, in order. One household, one household without missing shoulder to shoulder: describe the crowd as crowded.
Shoulder-to-shoulder – refers to being close to each other. It is also described as crowded.
Shoulder to shoulder: shoulder to shoulder, back to back. Describe a lot of people.
Rubbing your face side by side - next to you: close. Rub, touch. Describe the appearance of a nickname.
Shoulder-to-back – shoulder-to-shoulder: Shoulder-to-shoulder. Lap on the back: Put your hand on the back of someone else. Describe the appearance of extreme intimacy.
Shoulder-to-shoulder – describes a crowded crowd.
Shoulder-to-shoulder – describes a crowded crowd.
Door-to-door - next to each other: in order. In the order of the householders, none of them were left behind. Same as "door-to-door".
Door-to-door – door-to-door, and not a single family was missed.
Three to five - to describe a large number of people, continuous connection.
Surrounded by mountains and seas - describes a large number of people and overcrowded.
East and West: Describe no fixed target, running around. Same as "running around".
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Idioms for suffering:
1) Suffer from hunger and cold: suffer: suffer. It refers to the state of poverty without food and clothing.
2) Beaten and angry: suffered: suffered. Being beaten, scolded and abused.
3) Beaten and scolded: suffered. Being beaten, scolded and abused.
4) Door-to-door: By: in turn, in order. One family, no leakage.
5) Door-to-door: By: in order. In the order of the householders, none of them were left behind. Same as "door-to-door".
6) Shoulder-to-shoulder: Describe a crowded crowd.
7) Crowded with mountains and seas: Describes a large number of people and overcrowded.
8) Suffer from three to five: Describe a lot of people and constant connections.
9) Door-to-door: Door-to-door, not a single family is missed.
10) Shoulder to shoulder: Shoulder to shoulder: shoulder to shoulder. Lap on the back: Put your hand on the back of someone else. Describe the appearance of extreme intimacy.
11) Shoulder to shoulder: Closer. Rub, touch. Describe the appearance of a nickname.
12) Shoulder-to-shoulder: Refers to the close proximity of the body. It is also described as crowded.
13) Shoulder to shoulder: Describe a crowded crowd.
14) Door-to-door: one household at a time, every household does not leak. Ly, sequentially, sequentially.
15) Caught in the wind: A metaphor for finding a way to achieve a certain goal.
16) Shoulder-to-shoulder: Describe the crowding of people and reeds.
17) Shoulder to shoulder: Closer; Rub: Rub. Describe a lot of people.
18) Suffer from cold and starvation: suffer: suffer. It refers to the poverty of lack of slip belts, lack of food and clothing.
19) East and West Collision: Same as "East and West Collision".
20) Suffer from cold and hunger: suffer from teasing: suffer. It refers to the state of poverty without food and clothing.
21) Endure hunger: endure hunger. Described as extremely poor.
22) Push: push: prevarication. Describe repeated prevarication and procrastination.
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1. Rub your back shoulder to shoulder; Shoulder to shoulder, back to back. Describe a lot of people.
2. Catch the seam in the wind; The metaphor is to find a way to achieve a certain goal.
3, three top five; Describe a lot of people and a constant connection.
4. Being beaten and angry; suffered. Being beaten, scolded and abused.
5. Door-to-door; Every household, every household does not leak. Ly, sequentially, sequentially.
6. Plugging the sea by the mountains; Describes a large number of people and overcrowded.
7. Being beaten and scolded; suffered. Being beaten, scolded and abused.
8. Squeezed one after another; Squeeze around. It is also used to describe a lot of people.
9. Shoulder to shoulder; Shoulder to shoulder and shoulder to shoulder. Lap on the back: Put your hand on the back of someone else. Describe the appearance of extreme intimacy.
10. Rubbing shoulders side by side; Refers to physical proximity. It is also described as crowded.
11. Hunger and cold; suffered. It refers to the state of poverty without food and clothing.
12. Door-to-door; Door to door, not a single family was missed.
13. Shoulder to shoulder; Describe crowds.
14. Wipe your face side by side; Close to each other. Rub, touch. Describe the appearance of a nickname.
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