Calm: unhurried, very calm; unhurried:" />
1. Four-character words for "what is content and what is broken"
Take your time [cóng róng bù pò]
Vocabulary book
Basic meaning
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Calm: unhurried, very calm; unhurried: not hurried. Take your time and be calm and collected. < /p>
Example
Although he carries the heaviest burden, he always walks at the front silently.
Near synonyms
Synonyms
Slow, calm, calm, indifferent, indifferent, moving when the time comes, unhurried, calm, well-prepared, at ease, at ease, calm in the place, indifferent, look calm, look confident Calm and composed
Antonyms
Can't wait, be overwhelmed, be in a hurry, be in a hurry, bewildered, bewildered, bewildered, be at a loss, be restless, be anxious, be anxious, be worried, bewildered, bewildered, bewildered, bewildered, bewildered Mouth is dumbfounded, eyes are horrified, heart is horrified, mouth is trembling, heart is frightened, face is blank, and everyone is looking at each other in bewilderment 2. What are the four-character idioms that mean seeing through but not telling?
The four-character idioms expressing seeing through but not telling are: tacit, secretive, tight-lipped, Keep it secret and understand it deeply.
1. tacit understanding Pinyin xīn zhào bù xuān Explanation: to know; to declare: to say openly. They understand each other in their hearts without saying it publicly.
Source: Jin Dynasty Pan Yue's "Xiahou Changshi's Elegy": "My heart and soul are in perfect communication, only I and my son." Later it was written as "Tacit understanding".
2. Secret but not announced Pinyin mì ér bù xuān Explanation: Say it publicly. Keep it a secret and refuse to announce it.
Source "Three Kingdoms·Wei Zhi·Dong Zhao Biography": "Keeping the secret but not revealing it enables power to be achieved, not based on calculation." 3. Keep your mouth shut Pinyin shǒu kǒu rú píng Explanation Shukou: Keep your mouth tightly shut and don't speak .
Keeping your mouth shut is like shutting up a bottle. Describes someone who speaks cautiously and keeps secrets strictly.
Source: Tang Dynasty Daoshi's "Collection of Sutras·Zhongjiaobu·Punishue" quoted from "Mojie Sutra": "The defense is like a city, and the mouth is as tight as a bottle." Song Dynasty Zhou Mi's "Guixin Miscellaneous Identification Collection" 》 Next: "Fu Zhenggong has a saying of 'keep your mouth tight and guard your mind like a city'."
4. Keep a secret like a city. The original intention was that the event was important and should not be mentioned.
The back finger hides things very tightly. Source: "Gu Liang Zhuan·The Thirty-Two Years of Duke Zhuang": "It is better to keep something secret than to be secretive.
To have something to see, nothing is better than to be profound." 5. Pinyin xīn lǐng shén huìExplanation of Ling, Hui : comprehend, understand.
It means that the other party has understood it in his heart without saying it explicitly. Source: "Preface to Farewell to Fu Deqian Returning to Linchuan" by Wu Hai of Ming Dynasty: "There is something gained from reading, and I feel it silently, and I understand it in my heart. I feel like I am missing when I sit upright." 3. A four-character word starting with "break"
Full of curses To use bad words and curse people, break the gong into the gong: main; gong: round.
Destroy the square and make it a circle. It is a metaphor for abandoning harsh punishment and simplifying administration.
The momentum of breaking bamboo is a metaphor for winning every step without any obstacles. Tears turn into laughter. Tears: tears.
He suddenly stopped crying and smiled. Describes turning sadness into joy.
A broken-faced smile describes understanding. Pojia County Magistrate refers to a tyrannical local official.
Full of loopholes means there are many loopholes in what you say and do. Breaking the door, smashing the factory cake, breaking the sweet potato, and sneaking out of the palace. Break the door and rush out.
Describes bad people who can’t wait to jump out and do bad things. Also a metaphor for getting rid of constraints or limitations.
Break the moment into a circle and change the square into a circle. It is a metaphor for reducing the severity of the criminal law and simplifying it.
Breaking the pot, breaking the pot, and breaking the pot means that if you have shortcomings and mistakes, if you do not correct them, you will develop in a worse direction. Reunion after separation or divorce is a metaphor for couples reuniting after separation or divorce.
The year of breaking melon. The character melon can be divided into two horoscopes, so old poems and articles call a woman's sixteenth year "the year of breaking melon". Unprecedented means something that has never happened before.
Breaking through the wall and flying away. It is said that Zhang Sengyao, a painter from the Liang Dynasty, painted a dragon on the wall. After dotting its eyes, the dragon flew into the clouds. It is a metaphor for a person who suddenly becomes rich and powerful or whose official position rises quickly.
Broken tung leaves are a metaphor for things that have been separated and cannot be combined. To burn through the cauldron is a metaphor for making up one's mind and working hard to the end.
Destroy the old and establish the new. Destroy the old and establish the new. Breaking superstition originally meant being freed from the shackles of religious superstition.
Now also refers to emancipating the mind, eliminating inferiority complex, and establishing a new style of daring to think, dare to speak, and dare to do. Broken Bi destroys Gui. Bi and Gui: both are jade.
Destroy the jade. A metaphor for destroying something beautiful.
Bankruptcy and loss of business See "bankruptcy of home and property". After the nest is broken and the eggs are complete, see "the remaining eggs after the nest is broken".
The remaining eggs from a broken nest are used to describe people who have survived a broken home or a disaster. Turning sorrow into laughter. Turning sorrow into joy.
I am still scared and frightened. Describes great fear.
Breaking the cauldron and burning the boat is like breaking the cauldron and burning the boat. The language version of "Sun Tzu·Nine Places": "The commander went deep into the land of the princes and used his opportunity to burn the boat and break the cauldron, just like driving a flock of sheep." ·Broken axe": "It breaks my axe, but also lacks my bow." Ax and bow generally refer to weapons.
Later, the price that must be paid in the war was described as "broken ax and missing". Ruining the liver and stomach means being devoted to one's best.
The saying about breaking goblets and carvings comes from "Historical Records·Biographies of Cool Officials": "When the Han Dynasty was prosperous, the gongs were broken to make circles, and the carvings were made to be simple." Later, metaphors were used to delete the complicated and simplify, and to eliminate the flashy and upright. Rustic.
Ruin the family and ruin the fortune. Go bankrupt and deplete your family property.
See "bankruptcy". See "ruin the family and ruin the property".
To lose one’s family and lose one’s property. See “to lose one’s family and lose one’s property”. Destroying the family to serve the country. For the sake of the great cause of the country, he would not hesitate to destroy his own family.
A metaphor for selfless dedication. To break the fortress and destroy the strong means to break through and destroy the strong enemy.
Uncover the hidden villains. Broken mirror: broken mirror means scattered hair.
Hairpin: A hairpin is a kind of jewelry composed of two strands of hairpin. It is pinned on a woman’s hair bun. The hairpin strands are separated to form a single hairpin. The hairpin is a metaphor for the relationship between husband and wife or lovers. Parting, separation, also specifically refers to separation. A metaphor for a divorced couple.
Also known as "the mirror is broken and the hairpin is divided". The broken mirror reunites. See "The broken mirror reunites."
If the army is broken, the general will be killed. ① If the army is broken, the general will be killed. It is said that the whole army was wiped out.
②Break the enemy army and kill the enemy general. Break the waves and ride the wind. See "ride the wind and break the waves." Break the eggs and overturn the nest. Break the eggs into pieces and overturn the nest.
It is a metaphor for cutting off the roots and using cruel methods. Break in. Break down the door and get in.
Mostly refers to theft. Broken clothes and sparse soup. Broken clothes and vegetarian food.
Describes a simple life. Breaking the brain and cutting the heart is like cutting the heart and blood.
A metaphor for loyalty. To break a qin and cut off its strings means that there is no sound in the world and one will no longer play the qin.
To risk one's life without regard for one's own life; to disregard everything. Breaking tears into laughter See "breaking tears into laughter".
Broken copper and iron ① Old, rusty and useless copper and iron utensils. ②Generally refers to various worn out and useless utensils.
A broken head means a bloody head. Broken tiles and ruined buildings, broken houses and broken walls.
Describes dilapidated and abandoned buildings. crap, poor craftsmanship; poor objects.
Break off the cliff’s corners and smooth out the edges and corners. It means dealing with things smoothly.
Break bamboo to build a stronghold. The momentum is like breaking a bamboo to build a stronghold. It is a metaphor for being condescending and invincible.
Breaking Pillars to Seek Rape "Book of the Later Han Dynasty·Dang Guo Biography·Li Ying": "At that time, Zhang made his younger brother Shuo an order of the wild king. He was greedy and ruthless, and even killed pregnant women. After hearing the sternness and majesty, he fled in fear of crime. The capital master hid his brother in the Hezhu, so he led his officers to break the pillar and take Shuo.
After receiving his words, he was killed. "Breaking pillars to seek adultery" is an allusion to not being afraid of powerful people, searching for bad guys, and upholding the law of the country.
Broken nest and remaining eggs 〖Explanation〗It is a metaphor for a person who has broken down his family or survived a disaster. Destroy the country and destroy the family. 〖Explanation〗The country is destroyed and the family is destroyed.
Destroy the family and destroy the country. 〖Explanation〗The country is destroyed and the family is destroyed. Tattered 〖Explanation〗 Tattered and in disgrace.
Tattered and dilapidated appearance. 〖Explanation〗A tattered appearance. Breaking the steamer without caring 〖Explanation〗Zeng: an ancient earthenware cooking utensil; Gu: looking back.
The steamer has fallen to the ground and is broken, so don’t look at it anymore. It is a metaphor for a fait accompli and no regrets. 4. The meaning of the four-character idiom
Three people become tigers: Three people lied about a tiger in the city, and the people who listened believed it. The more people talk about it, the more people will take the rumor as fact.
Disagree: Ran: Yes, right. Don't think it's right. Express disagreement or denial.
Qiuquan blame: seek, blame: demand; quan, bei: complete, perfect. The requirements for people and things are perfect, without any shortcomings.
长无物: There is nothing else on the body, describing poverty.
Loss of interest: refers to gradually losing interest in something.
To condone the people and attack the crime: to condone: to express condolences; to attack: to punish. Comfort the suffering people and attack the guilty rulers.
Insufficiency of words means that words and sentences cannot express the meaning and feelings accurately.
Don’t donate anything big or small: Xiao: micro, small; donate: give up. Neither the small nor the big one is abandoned. The description is all-encompassing and leaves no choice.
Reunion: a metaphor for a couple reuniting after separation or divorce.
Once and for all: Yi: Comfortable. Work hard once and get things done, and you won't have to work hard again in the future.
草茶干饭: coarse: rough and simple; lightly rice: refers to simple food. Describe simple diet and simple life.
无名一文: Name: Possession. Not a penny. Describes extreme poverty.
Five Winds and Ten Rains: The wind blows once every five days and it rains once every ten days. Describes good weather.
Dafangzhijia: Dafang: great principles. Originally refers to a person who understands the truth. Later, it generally refers to a person who has extensive knowledge or expertise.
Flying together: Wings flying together: Wings next to each other. Flying in pairs: Flying together in pairs. It is a metaphor for a husband and wife who are in love and move forward side by side in their careers.
To bring back to life: To revive a dying person. Describes excellent medical skills. It is also a metaphor for saving something that has no hope.
Rejuvenate with a wonderful hand: rejuvenate: bring spring back, a metaphor for reviving a dying person. Refers to the doctor's excellent medical skills.
Running around to tell each other: When there is important news, people run around to tell each other.
Encounter by chance: Duckweed drifts with the water, gathering and dispersing indefinitely. It is a metaphor for meeting people who have never known each other by chance.
The lotus root has been broken, but there are still many threads connected. The metaphor does not completely sever ties. It mostly refers to the difficulty in breaking up the love between men and women.
Bamboo shoots spring up after the rain: refers to the bamboo shoots that sprout in large numbers after the rain in spring. A metaphor for things quickly emerging in large numbers.
Do everything: There is nothing you won’t do. It means doing any bad thing.
Renew one's mind: clear out old thoughts and change the old appearance. A metaphor for complete repentance.
Qingchao: pour out; nest: nest. It is a metaphor for the enemy to dispatch all its troops to invade.
Arty: Arty: to rely on, follow; Fengya: generally refers to poetry. It refers to people who lack cultural accomplishment and make friends with literati and participate in relevant cultural activities in order to decorate their appearance.
Hope this helps! 5. What does unbreakable break mean?
Idiom explanation: Lao: solid. Very strong; indestructible.
Source of the idiom: Tang Hanyu's "Ping Huaixi Monument": "The high official's singing voice, thousands of voices echoing it, become one, and it is unbreakable." 911cha
Simple Idiom Pin: LBKP
Idiom phonetic notation: ㄌㄠˊ ㄅㄨˋ ㄎㄜˇ ㄆㄛˋ
Frequency: common idioms
Number of idiom words: four-character idiom
Feeling *** color: neutral idiom
Idiom usage: Unbreakable is more formal; used as a predicate and attributive; it has a commendatory meaning.
Idiom structure: more formal idiom
Idiom era: ancient idiom
Correct pronunciation of the idiom: no, cannot be read as "bú"; broken, cannot be read as " pè".
Idiom analysis: see "indestructible" (page 475), "unbreakable" (page 245).
Synonyms: stable as a mountain, indestructible
Antonyms: defeated, collapsed at the first touch
Examples of idioms: Our unity and friendship are unbreakable.