Idioms to start things.

Idioms are stereotypes in Chinese vocabulary. Idioms, everyone says they have become words, and so do idioms. Idioms are mostly four-character, and some are three-character, five-character or even more than seven-character. The following is the related content of the idiom' start things and do things well' that I have compiled. Let's have a look.

Understand the truth of everything in the world and handle affairs successfully accordingly.

Idiom: things can be done.

Pinyin: kāI wüchéng wü

Short spell: kwcw

Interpretation: openness: openness, understanding; Business: business. Knowing the principle of stunners, you can do all kinds of things well.

Source: Zhouyi? On the copula: "Fu Zhi's" Yi "has achieved something and adopted the way of the world, just as it did."

Example: I dabbled endlessly and learned a lot from it. Song Mao's Sacrifice to De Zai Zhi Fu

Synonym:

Antonym:

Grammar: as a predicate; Knowing the truth of everything and acting accordingly.

Open something, idioms solitaire.

Follow-up: farming and civil affairs, go to China to be pragmatic, focus on basics, and exercise restraint to the end.

Shunjie: No urgency, no knowledge of world events, no knowledge of world events, no knowledge of world events, no knowledge of world events.

Reverse connection: the eight-character can't be opened, and it can't be opened.

Reverse connection: open the clouds to see the sky, open the clouds to see the sun, open the Buddha's light, open the new century, open the treasure, transport the harm, start the machine, open the robbery, open the people, and achieve fruitful results.

Idiom annotation

Openness: openness, understanding; Business: business.

Origin of idioms

"Book of Changes": "I have achieved something by the Book of Changes, and I have taken the road of the world, that's all."

Idiom usage

As a predicate; Knowing the truth of everything and acting accordingly.

example

I dabble endlessly, learn from history, and do things well in order to express my ambition. (Song Mao's "Sacrificing Yu De in the Magistrate's County")

Song Yingxing, a scientist in the Ming Dynasty, explained "opening things" in "Heavenly Creations". "Creating things" means that people develop all things, that is, they appreciate all things through human efforts, and it is also the embodiment of China's ancient thought of harmony between man and nature.