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The idioms related to reading books are as follows:
Well-read, rich and rich, well-read, erudite, full of economy, Bogu Tongjin, sweat cow full, talented eight buckets, reading more than 10,000 volumes, chewing words, cold window hard reading, including English chewing Chinese, words and sentences, word by word, reciting like a stream, Wei compilation three unique, inferences.
Forget to sleep and eat, keep your hands on the book, stay up all night, work day and night, chisel the wall to steal the light, sleep at night, log police pillow, cantilever beam thorn strands, sac firefly reflecting snow, all night long, tireless, perseverance, perseverance, dripping water through stones, well-read, never tired of learning, erudition and strong memory, shameless questioning, step by step, integration, express their opinions, brainstorming.
Famous sayings about reading
1. Reading a good book is like making a good friend. - Zang Kejia.
2. Learning is not the same as imitating something, but mastering skills and methods. - Gorky.
3. If a student regards Mr. as a model rather than an adversary, he will never be able to stand out from the blue. - Belinsky.
4. Keep learning and you will know everything. The more you know, the more powerful you become. - Gorky.
5. In terms of reading, the quantity is not the first priority, but the quality of the book and the degree of reflection aroused. —Benjamin Franklin.
6. Threesome, there must be my teacher. Choose those who are good and follow them, and change those who are not good. - Confucius.
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1. Day ploughing and night recitation [ zhòu gēng yè sòng ] Farming during the day and reading at night. It is a metaphor for reading diligently.
Source: Northern Qi Wei Shu "Wei Shu Cui Guang Biography": "The family is poor and studious; day ploughing and night recitation; Helper to support parents. ”
Translation: The poor family likes to study, farming during the day and reading at night, and using the money earned from reading books to support their parents.
2. pillow scripture book [ zhěn jīng jí shū ] pillow sutra, cushion book. Describe a cool love of reading and take books as a companion.
Source: "Anthology of Literature, Bangu Answering Bin Play": The book of the pillow of the pillow, the body and the door, there is no pedicle on the top, and there is no root on the bottom. ”
Translation: In vain to revel in the classics on the headrest, lie on the books, and let yourself be aggrieved by the dilapidated old house, with no one to invoke and no one to rely on.
3. pillow book classic history [ zhěn jí jīng shǐ ] pillow classics, cushion history books. Described as concentrating on reading.
Source: Qing Zhang Tailai's "Catalogue of Jiangxi Poetry Society": "Li Peng's family is poor in learning, pillow books and history, and poetry and literature can be the head of all families. ”
Translation: Li Peng's family is poor and knowledgeable, dedicated to reading, and has both the advantages of each family in poetry and writing.
4. 折节读书 [ zhé jié dú shū ] fold section: change past interests and behaviors. Change old habits and read angrily.
Source: Southern Dynasty Song Fan Ye "Later Han Shu Duan Gong Biography": "Gong Shao learned to bow horses, Shang Ranger, light money and bribery, and long is a good ancient study." ”
Translation: When he was young, Duan Cheng liked to ride horses and shoot arrows, longed for the life of a ranger, and did not like money.
5. Source Living Water [ yuán tóu huó shuǐ ] The more you read, the clearer the truth. Now also refers to the driving force and source of the development of things.
Source: Song Zhu Xi's poem "Reading Books with Feelings": "Asking where the canal is as clear as promised, it is said that there is a source of living water." ”
Translation: Why is the water in the pond so clear? It is because there is an inexhaustible source of living water that continuously delivers it with living water.
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Forget to sleep and eat, concentrate, cantilever thorn strands, never get tired of learning, diligent and inquisitive, etc.
1. Forget to sleep and eat.
Forget to eat, a Chinese idiom, pinyin is fèi qǐn wàng shí, which means to take care of not sleeping, forgetting to eat. Describe concentration and hard work.
From "Liezi Tianrui Chapter": "There are people in the country who are worried about the collapse of the world and the abolition of sleepers. “
Meaning: There are people in the country who are worried that the sky will fall and the earth will collapse, and they can't even care about sleeping and eating.
2. Concentrate.
心致志, pinyin is zhuān xīn zhì zhì, which means to put all your thoughts on it. Described as single-minded and concentrated.
From "Mencius: Gaozi I": "If you don't concentrate, you can't." ”
Meaning: If you don't put your mind to it, you won't get results.
3. Cantilever thorn strands.
The pinyin is xuán liáng cì gǔ, which is a metaphor for studying hard in waste sleep and forgetting to eat.
Western Han Dynasty Liu Xiang "Warring States Policy: Qin Ce I" :(Su Qin) was asleep from reading, and he stabbed himself in the thigh.
Meaning: When you are so tired that you want to take a nap, you can prick your thigh with an awl that you have prepared.
Eastern Han Dynasty Bangu "Book of Han": Sun Jing, the word Wenbao, studious, morning and evening. When you are tired of sleeping, tie your head with a rope and hang the roof beams.
Meaning: There is a young man named Sun Jing, who is tireless and diligent and studious, and rarely rests from morning to night when he reads behind closed doors, and sometimes he is easy to doze off in the middle of the night;
Sun Jing found a rope and tied one end to his hair and the other end to the beam of the house, so that when he was tired and dozing off from reading, as long as his head was lowered, the rope would hold his hair and pull his scalp painfully, and he would wake up from the pain and continue reading.
4. Learn and never get tired.
Learn without getting tired, pinyin is xué ér bú yàn. It means that when learning is not satisfied, the metaphor is very studious.
From "The Analects of Confucius": "Learn without getting tired of teaching, and never tire of teaching." ”
Meaning: to learn without being satisfied, to teach others without tirelessness.
5. Be diligent and inquisitive.
Diligent learning is good at asking, pinyin is qín xué hǎo wèn, which means to study diligently, ask if you don't understand, and figuratively be good at learning.
From Song Zhu Xi's "Zhu Zi's Language: The Analects": "Now I am diligent and inquisitive." ”
Meaning: I study very diligently now, and I always ask people questions.
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