Idioms that begin with ten thousand words.

Idioms beginning with a million words: colorful, United as one, stretching for thousands of years, a thousand words.

1, colorful

Pronunciation: Wan surname

Type: 4-character idiom

Source: Song Zhuxi's poem "Spring Day": "When you are free, you know the east wind, and it is always spring."

Vernacular interpretation: anyone can see the face of spring. The spring breeze is full of flowers and colors, and the scenery of spring is everywhere.

Explanation: Colorful means to describe a hundred flowers blooming and colorful. It also means that things are colorful.

Step 2 stick together

Pronunciation: wàn zhòng yī xīn x and n x and n

Type: 4-character idiom

Source: "The Biography of Zhu Kun in the Later Han Dynasty": "Ten thousand people are United as one, which is still inappropriate, and the situation is hundreds of thousands!"

Vernacular interpretation: If you can do your best, you will be invincible in the world.

Explanation: Uniting as one means that thousands of people are United as one. Describe unity.

3. Thousands of years.

Pronunciation: wàn zài qiān qi

Type: 4-character idiom

Source: Ming's anonymous "He Yuanxiao" is the third fold: "Today's saints are benevolent and filial, and the Millennium is peaceful."

Interpretation of vernacular Chinese: Contemporary saints have benevolence and filial piety, which can last a very long time.

Explanation: "Immortality" means a very long experience. With "ten thousand generations".

4, thousands of words

Pronunciation: Wan Y incarnation

Type: 4-character idiom

Source: Tang Zhenggu's poem "Yan": "There are thousands of words that no one will know, chasing prostitutes over the short wall."

Interpretation in vernacular Chinese: Swallows chattered a lot, but no one could understand them. It didn't find a bosom friend, so it had to fly away with the street warbler.

Explanation: A thousand words mean a thousand words.

5, thousands of heads

Pronunciation: wàn xüqiān tóu

Type: 4-character idiom

Source: Three Kingdoms Cao Weizhi's Self-discipline Order: "The machine is picky, there are many things, and there is nothing to say."

Vernacular interpretation: machines (a person's name) They are always very picky, picking bones in eggs and haggling over everything. Although they can come up with many ideas in dealing with problems, no one can really express them clearly.

Description: Wan Xu Qian Tou means thread: thread head. Metaphor is the beginning of things, and there are many clues. It also describes things as complicated and chaotic.