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Not an idiom.
Definition: Uncontrollable excitement; Described as very happy; The emotion of feeling fond of things.
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The pride of heaven is an idiom, a metaphor for talented and influential people.
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There is an idiom about the pride of the sky, which is the pride of the Huns in ancient times. The latter generally refers to people who are talented and influential.
From "Hanshu Xiongnu Biography I".
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Whoever has a living guest is not an idiom, nor is it a word.
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No, one big and one small are four-word words, and there are many other four-word words similar to them, such as one black and one white, one good and one evil
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One big and one small is not a four-word idiom.
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No, it can be used.
Antique idiom explained.
Pinyin]: gǔ sè gǔ xiāng
Interpretation]: Descriptions, paintings, calligraphy and paintings, etc., are rich in quaint colors and moods.
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Scolding is not a four-character idiom. Sharp sound, refers to a stern voice.
From the text "White Goose": "The goose master came back early by chance, stretched out his neck to bite the dog, and scolded loudly. ”
This sentence uses the rhetorical device of personification. Wrote out the ** of the white goose.
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I think that scolding is not a four-character idiom, and "scolding" modifies "scolding" but does not have the meaning of an idiom, so it is not used as an idiom. Idioms such as "water drops wear stones", "painting snakes add feet", "foxes and fake tigers" have deep meanings behind them, not only superficial meanings, and idioms are recognized by language users.
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Answer: Scolding is not a four-character idiom. There is no idiom that screams and scolds, and the idiom that contains the sound is: 正色力声 Pronunciation: zhèng sè lì shēng Explanation: Strict attitude, harsh words.
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It's not an idiom, it means very powerful, it has the meaning of scolding people, and the expression is serious. For example, a woman in the street screams and curses, which is very out of harmony with the harmonious atmosphere around her.
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Shouting and scolding is not a four-character idiom, it is a four-character word, and screaming and scolding is an idiom.
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Shouting and scolding, is it a four-character idiom, scolding is a phrase, not an idiom.
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Shouting and scolding is a four-word idiom, and it is harshly reprimanded and abused.
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This should not belong to the four-character idiom.
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Scolding is not an idiom.
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1. Scolding is a phrase, not an idiom, and idioms generally come from their origins.
Four-character idioms are: one comes and goes, half-hearted, seven up and eight down, four flat and eight stable, colorful, colorful, thousands of troops, thousands of words, thousands of mountains and rivers, thousands of knives, a thousand shots, a hundred shots, one hundred shots, one heart.
Absurd: No, abnormal. False and bizarre, unreasonable. >>>More
No. What a miser.
The four-character idiom. Contain. >>>More
Wonderful, wonderful
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Like an arm making a finger. The metaphor is that the command is wishful and there is no containment. >>>More