Regarding the idioms of the ancients who read and studied, write three idioms related to the reading

Updated on culture 2024-08-10
13 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-15

    Chengmen Lixue, Cantilever Beam Thorn Strands, Chisel Wall to Steal Light, Chisel Wall to Borrow Light, Negative Paid Reading, Negative Salary Hanging Horn, Horn Hanging Book, No Peep Garden, No Peep Garden, No Peep Garden, Three Years of Watching the Garden, Reflecting the Snow Bag Firefly, Sac Firefly Reading, Wei Compilation Three Uniques, Waste Sleep and Forget Food, Happy to Forget Worries, I Don't Know the Coming of Old Age, Reflecting the Moon Reading, Reflecting the Snow Reading, Reading Under the Curtain, Reading More Than Three Readings, Reading, Gao Feng Liumai, Wen Shu Weaving Pu, Weaving Pu Copying Books, Mouth and Tongue Sores, Hoeing with the Warp, Incineration Paste Following the Sundial, Ten Years of Cold Window, Ten Years Under the Window, Cold Window Hard Reading, Meng's Mother Three Moves, I can't release the scroll, read more than 10,000 volumes, listen to lectures across the fence, weave curtains and recite books, paint the ground with Di, read at night, read on the wall, read hard with a negative salary, read on the three books, work hard, do not squint, concentrate on ......

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-14

    Chisel the wall to steal the light, Chengmen Lixue, pen and ink paper inkstone, candle night talk, name Sun Mountain, gold list title, list eye to explore flowers, learn rich five cars, cantilever beam thorn strands, splash ink, pillars of the country, learn the sea endlessly, turn the scroll is beneficial, knowledgeable, side recruitment, shocking work, bite the text and chew the words, export into chapters, force through the back of the paper, full of economy.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-13

    Hello, the idioms about the ancients studying and reading are:

    Chengmen Lixue, three visits to the thatched house, chiseling the wall to steal the light, hanging beams and piercing strands, reading at night, smelling chickens and dancing.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    Iron pestle into a needle. In ancient times, Li Bai was called Li Taibai when he was a child, there was a stream Li Bai at the foot of a mountain, he studied on this mountain, Li Bai was very naughty, often skipped school, once when he went down the mountain, he saw an old grandmother was magic iron rod, what was his grandmother doing? Grandma said that he was going to grind this iron rod into an embroidery needle, and he hurriedly ran back to the school to re-study, and when he grew up, he became a poet and a poet.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Chisel into the wall to steal the light. Reverence for a teacher.

    Iron pestle into a needle.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    The idioms of reading and studying include Meng's mother three moves, Wei compilation three uniques, cantilever thorn strands, sac firefly reflecting snow, chiseling the wall to steal the light, Chengmen Lixue, shameless questioning, shameless teacher, worthy of going to school, good to learn the ancients, dull learning and tiredness, sudden learning and tiredness, anger and forgetting to eat, waste sleep and forget to eat, tireless learning, hand not letting go of the scroll, iron pestle into a needle ......If you are interested, you can also take a look at other people's! ヾ(

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Cantilever thorn strands- Chinese idioms. From the Eastern Han Dynasty Ban Gu's "Book of Han" and the Western Han Dynasty Liu Xiang's "Warring States Policy: Qin Ceyi". This idiom uses the story of Sun Jing's "head hanging beam" and Su Qin's "cone and thorn stock" as a metaphor for studying hard.

    Chisel into the wall to steal the light. - Chinese idioms. From "Xijing Miscellaneous". This idiom originally referred to the Western Han Dynasty Kuang Heng chiseled through the wall to lead the neighbors to read by candlelight, and was later used to describe the poor family and hard study.

    I can't let go of the scroll——It is an idiom that is ** in historical stories, and the relevant allusions of the idiom first came from the Three Kingdoms Wei Cao Pi's "Classics and Self-Description": "Shang (referring to Cao Cao) is a good poetry book, although he is in the army, he can't release the volume." The original meaning of "hand not to release the scroll" is to always hold the scroll in the hand, which is a metaphor for diligence and studiousness.

    In addition, there are:Snow sac fireflies, broken knots to read, dull learning, Chengmen Lixue

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    The idioms of studying and studying include Meng's mother three moves, Wei compiling three uniques, hanging beam thorn strands, sac firefly reflecting snow, chiseling the wall to steal the light, Chengmen Lixue, shameless to ask, shameless teacher, worthy of going to school, good at learning the ancients, dull learning and tiredness, sudden learning and tiredness, anger and forgetting to eat, waste sleep and forget to eat, studious and tireless, etc.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    You can write: Reading at night, chiseling the wall to steal the light, Chengmen Lixue, Wei compiling the three uniques, the hand does not release the volume, the hanging beam piercing the strands, and the iron pestle into a needle.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Meng's mother moved three times, shamelessly asked, and chiseled the wall to borrow light.

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    The cantilever pierced strands, the iron pestle into a needle,

  12. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    The ancients worked very hard to read, and there are many idioms that have been handed down, such as sac fireflies reflecting snow, chiseling the wall to steal light, smelling chickens dancing, hanging beams and thorns, etc., all of which are idioms about the ancients reading books, each of which is a story.

  13. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    1.Fly to the snow: Read with firefly lighting, read with snow lighting. Describe diligent study and hard work.

    2.Cantilever piercing strands: Hang your hair on a beam and prick your thighs with an awl. Described as studying hard.

    3.Wei edits three uniques: Wei:

    Cooked cowhide. Wei editor: In ancient times, bamboo was used to write books, and bamboo compendiums were compiled with cooked cowhide strips to connect Mingyan to make "Wei compilation".

    Three: multiple times. Absolutely

    Break. The backlash was so much that the leather rope of the bamboo slips was broken many times. It refers to studying diligently and diligently.

    4.Cheng Men Lixue: Standing in front of Cheng Yi's door in the heavy snow, he described respecting teachers and seeking advice sincerely.

    5.Chisel through the wall to steal light: Chisel through the wall to draw light. Described as a poor family and still studying hard.

    6.Hanging a book on the horns: Hang the book on the horns and read the book while putting the cow on it. The metaphor is diligent and studious.

    7.Day ploughing and night recitation: Farming in the sky, reading at night, describing grasping the time to study, reading diligently.

    8.Log pillow: Use log as a pillow, easy to wake up when you fall asleep, and you won't be lazy. Describe spurring yourself, diligent and unremitting.

    9.Embrace the ice in the cold in winter, hold the fire in the heat in summer: describe working hard and honing yourself.

    10.Wei weaving three uniques: Wei weaving: use cooked cowhide rope to connect the bamboo compendium; Three: the approximate number, indicating multiple times; Absolute: Broken. The leather rope that was connected to the bamboo slips was broken three times. It is a metaphor for reading diligently.

    11.Day ploughing and night recitation: Farming during the day and reading at night. It is a metaphor for reading diligently.

    12.Chisel the wall to steal the light: Kuang Heng is a childish man, he is diligent and studious, but he has no money to buy candles because he is poor.

    The neighbor's house lit candles at night, but the candlelight could not shine in, so Kuang Heng dug a hole in the wall to let the candlelight shine in, and read by the faint candlelight. Kuang Heng's spirit of chiseling the wall and stealing the light and studying hard was praised by later generations.

    13.Tireless: diligent: diligent, unremitting. Refers to working or studying diligently and tirelessly.

    14.Sanyu Reading: Also known as "Dong Yu Persuasion", from Yu Feng's "Wei Luo, Confucianism, Dong Yu", refers to reading good books to seize all spare time.

    The above is an idiom about the ancients who read and studied, I hope it will be helpful to you.

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