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Xiaoxue wrote for reference that although people can't be resurrected after death, but in the military... That's what I wrote.
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Who can help me borrow the corpse to resurrect the soul! Would love to go back to being 20 years old! Then I can be with my beloved forever!
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1. Resurrection by the corpse originally meant something that had died, and it was resurrected with the help of some form, and when used in military affairs, it refers to the strategy of using and dominating those forces that have not done anything to achieve our goals.
2, from the fourteenth plan of "Thirty-six Strategies" - borrowing the corpse to return the soul. Superstitious people believe that after death, the soul can be resurrected by attaching to the corpse of someone else. Later, it is used as a metaphor for things that have been destroyed or declined, and then reappear under another name or in another form.
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Superstitious believers believe that after death, a person can be resurrected by attaching his soul to the corpse of another person. The metaphor of what has been destroyed or that has not happened to fall has taken another form.
Idiom source: Yuan Yue Bochuan's "Iron Kidnapping Li Wedge": "Yue Shou, who wants you Hun family to burn your corpse, I am now borrowing your corpse to return the soul, the corpse is Xiao Li Tu, and the soul is Yue Shou." ”
Idiom example sentences: But the landlord is over there, the work group has just left, and just after the struggle, people will come to take revenge, and they can also borrow corpses to revive their souls!
Traditional Chinese Writing: Resurrection of the Soul.
Note: Synonyms of resurrection of the corpse: Dongshan Resurrection After Xie An resigned from the Eastern Jin Dynasty, he lived in seclusion in Dongshan, and later held important positions.
A metaphor for the re-emergence of the power that has lost power, and a metaphor for the revival of the old things that have died out of power The fire is not ember, and the jade is solid; There is a resurgence of ashes, and there is something to be done.
Idiom grammar: linkage; type noisy filial piety as a predicate, object, and definite; Derogatory.
Degree of Popularity: Commonly used idioms.
Affection. Color: Unisex idiom.
Idiom Structure: Partial formal idiom.
Year of generation: Ancient idiom.
English Transcript Translation: Revive in Another Man's dead body
Idiom riddle: Imp reincarnation.
Pronunciation note: Also, it cannot be pronounced as "hái".
Note: Soul cannot be written as "魄".
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1. Borrowing the corpse to return the soul, the Chinese idiom, pinyin is jiè shī huán hún, which means that the metaphor of something that has been extinguished or declined appears in another form. From "Iron Kidnapping Lee Wedge".
2, Yuan Yue Bochuan's "Iron Kidnapping Li Wedge": "Yue Shou, who wants your Hun family to burn your corpse, I am now borrowing your corpse to return the soul, the corpse is Xiao Li Tu, and the soul is Yue Shou." ”
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Superstitious believers believe that after death, a person can be resurrected by attaching his soul to the corpse of another person. The metaphor of what has been extinguished or declined has taken another form.
Idiom source: Yuan Yue Bochuan's "Iron Kidnapping Li Wedge": "Yue Shou, who wants you Hun family to burn your corpse, I am now borrowing your corpse to return the soul, the corpse is Xiao Li Tu, and the soul is Yue Shou." ”
Idiom example sentences: But the landlord is over there, the work group has just left, and just after the struggle, people will come to take revenge, and they can also borrow corpses to revive their souls!
Traditional Chinese Writing: Resurrection of the Soul.
Note: Synonyms of resurrection of the corpse: Dongshan Resurrection After Xie An resigned from the Eastern Jin Dynasty, he lived in seclusion in Dongshan, and later held important positions.
A metaphor for the re-emergence of the power that has lost power, and a metaphor for the revival of the old things that have died out of power The fire is not ember, and the jade is solid; There is a resurgence of ashes, and there is something to be done.
Idiom grammar: linkage; as a predicate, object, and definite; Derogatory.
Degree of Popularity: Commonly used idioms.
Affection. Color: Unisex idiom.
Idiom Structure: Partial formal idiom.
Year of generation: Ancient idiom.
English translation: revive in another man's dead body
Idiom riddle: Imp reincarnation.
Pronunciation note: Also, it cannot be pronounced as "hái".
Note: Soul cannot be written as "魄".
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