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An Zhiruo Su refers to a person who is amiable and at ease with encounters, and also refers to a wise person who can easily face difficulties when encountered. The specific explanation of "Anzhiruosu" is as follows:
Meaning: Enron.
Get along, as usual, and don't feel that there is anything inappropriate. Ann: Enron, calmly; Zhi: pronoun, referring to a person or thing; If: and, elephant; Vegetarian: Usually.
Pinyin: ān zhī ruò sù
From: Qing Fan Yin's "Yue Proverbs, Supplementary Commentaries, On Falling into Poverty": "Greed and desire to escape from hard work, shame and habit of obscenity, willing to live under people, and be peaceful." ”
Interpretation: People are greedy for comfort and the pursuit of desires, but they are lazy, they avoid hardships, they are shameless and often go to flattery, so they are willing to live under others, but they still do not feel that there is anything inappropriate.
Grammar: subject-predicate; as a predicate, a definite; Describe not minding in the face of difficult situations, and feel calm.
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A heart is like stopping water, and being at peace is a rare mentality, it really is. If you have this mentality, you will keep it, and you will need this mentality to enter society. Nowadays, college students have just entered college, and many of them are not adapting, and anxiety and depression abound.
It's good that you can have that mindset. Study quietly, make friends quietly. Boys also like girls with this mentality.
I wish you a fulfilling and happy university life. Being yourself is the best.
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An Zhi Ruosu: An: Anran, calmly.
Zhi: pronoun, referring to a person or thing;
Vegetarian: Usually. Get along safely, as usual, and don't feel that anything is inappropriate!
It's a powerful, self-confident and positive mindset that is all under control! Only if you have a clear conscience and the ability to control your own future, can you have it! And this kind of ability must be done through one's previous efforts and can already cope with various unexpected situations in life and work!
So go for it!
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Ann: Enron, calmly; Zhi: pronoun, referring to a person or thing; Vegetarian: Usually. Safe and sound, as usual. When encountering an unpleasant situation or abnormal phenomenon, treat it as usual, and be able to deal with it safely and without paying attention.
You can't say that, pay attention to the context in which it is used, it is encountering a situation or anomaly that does not go well, such as her house being burglarized, but she is still at peace.
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Meaning: An: Anran, calmly; Zhi: pronoun, referring to a person or thing; Vegetarian: Usually. Get along safely, as usual, and don't feel anything inappropriate.
Pinyin: ān zhī ruò sù
From]: Qing Li Baojia's "The Appearance of Officialdom" Chapter 38: "Later, I got acquainted with each other, and when I saw that Mrs. Qu was often like this, I was at ease." ”
Later, they became familiar with each other, and when they saw that Mrs. Qu was often like this, they got along peacefully, and as usual, they didn't feel that there was anything inappropriate.
Example: This old scientist is at peace despite adversity.
Grammar: subject-predicate; as a predicate, a definite; Describe not minding in the face of difficult situations, and feel calm.
Antonyms] such as sitting on pins and needles.
Ru sit on needle felt is a Chinese idiom, pronounced rú zuò zhēn zhān, like sitting on a felt with a needle inserted. describes being unsettled and restless, from Fang Xuanling's "Jin Shu Du Pre-Biography".
The origin of the idiom "tired of the prince in the house." Bright and loyal, repeatedly admonished the prince, and his words were sincere, and the prince suffered. The back needle is often in the felt where the tin is sitting, and the thorn is bleeding. "It's like sitting on a felt with a needle in it, and it describes being restless and restless.
The 104th chapter of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty Chronicles: "Yan Prince Dan is in Qin, and when he hears Qin's back to Yan and Zhao, he is like sitting on pins and needles, and he wants to escape and return, but he is afraid that he will not be able to go out of the customs, but he wants to be friends with Ganluo, and he wants to plan for his return to Yan." It tells the story of a man named Du Xi in the Western Jin Dynasty, who was very knowledgeable and upright, and after becoming a prince in the middle of the house, he repeatedly persuaded Emperor Hui of the Jin Dynasty to have a prince (mǐn).
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Meaning: (in the event of a bad or abnormal situation) do not care, and treat it as usual.
From: Qing Fan Yin's "Yue Proverbs, Supplementary Commentaries, On Falling Poverty".
Original text: greed and desire to escape from hard work; Shame and obscenity; Willing to live under the people; Peaceful.
Interpretation: A person is greedy for leisure and the pursuit of desire, but lazy, avoids hardships when encountered, loses shame (or does not know shame) and often flatters, so willing to live under others, but still does not mind.
Nowadays, it is often used to mean that you are unconcerned about anomalies or things that don't go well. At the same time, it often refers to turning a blind eye to erroneous statements or things and letting them go unchecked.
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"The years are quiet, and the peace is good" means that people or things are as quiet and beautiful as they were at the beginning, and everyone gets along safely, as usual. To be at the best of their best. Among them, "the years are quiet", that is, life is peaceful and quiet, and it is better to be stable and healthy now; "Peaceful" means to take abnormalities or unpleasant situations as if they were normal.
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An Zhi Ruosu: An: Anran, calmly. Zhi: pronoun, referring to a person or thing; Vegetarian: Usually. Get along safely, as usual, and don't feel anything inappropriate.
synonyms: calmly, indifferently, and at ease.
Antonyms: such as sitting on pins and needles, panicking, restless sleeping, seeing strange thoughts.
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An Zhiruo Su means not minding what is happening in reality, ignoring it, and letting it go.
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Anzhirusu: When encountering an unsmooth situation or anomaly) treats it as usual, and does not care. Describe not minding in the face of difficulties, calm mood and being at peace with the situation: refers to being able to adapt to the environment and be satisfied in any situation.
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Get along safely, as usual, and don't feel anything inappropriate.
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Treat anomalies and unsatisfactory phenomena as normal and do not care.
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An Zhiruosu, idiom. It means getting along safely, as usual, and not feeling that there is anything inappropriate. From "Qing Chen Quji": "If my heart is determined, then the poor and the lowly, the sickness and the death, are all safe." ”
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When encountering an abnormal situation, treat it as usual and don't care.
安之若素, a Chinese idiom, pinyin is ānzhīruòsù, which means to get along with each other peacefully, and as usual, I don't feel that anything is inappropriate. From the Qing Dynasty "Chen Quji". idiom usage subject-predicate; as a predicate, a definite; Describe not minding in the face of difficult situations, and feel calm.
Example: The next day, Miss Bao woke up and felt very sorry.
Qing Fan Yin's "Yue Proverbs, Supplementary Commentaries, and Essays on Falling into Poverty": "Greed and desire to escape from hard work; Shame and obscenity; Willing to live under the people; Peaceful. ”
An Zhi Ruosu means An: Anran, calmly; Zhi: pronoun, referring to a person or thing; Vegetarian: Usually. Get along safely, as usual, and don't feel anything inappropriate.
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An Zhiruosu: Face it calmly, don't be surprised.
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Get along safely, as usual, and don't feel anything inappropriate.
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An Zhiruo Su refers to a person who is calm. An Zhi Ruosu, a Chinese idiom, means to get along with each other peacefully, as usual, and do not feel that there is anything inappropriate. From Morihashi Kiyoshi Chen Sure Collection.
Subject-predicate, as a predicate, a definite. Describe not minding in the face of difficult situations, and feel calm.
Proper nouns
Idioms also bear similarities with proper names, scientific terms, proverbs, afterwords, quotations, and ordinary four-word phrases, in some respects. For example, proper names and scientific terms are fixed phrases. Proverbs, afterwords, and quotations are not only fixed phrases or sentences, but they also have meanings that are somewhat similar to idioms.
The ordinary phrase composed of four characters is relatively concise, and the form is the same as that of most idioms, such as east, west, north and south, spring, summer, autumn and winter, etc., but these are not idioms. Clarifying the difference between idioms and proper names, scientific terms, etc., will help to determine what is and is not.
A few words in this regard. Idioms denote general concepts, such as the idiom of scattered, which can be used to describe a defeated flower, a defeated army, or a sparse crowd.
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