Eight-character idioms with opposite meanings in the front and back

An eight-character idiom with the opposite meaning: unprecedented, unprecedented

Pinyin: qián wú gǔ rén, hòu wú lái zhě

Explanation: Refers to unprecedented. Also used as sarcasm. It is the same as "the ancients are never seen in the past, and the newcomers are never seen in the future".

Eight-character idioms with opposite meanings: hearing is false, seeing is reality

Pinyin: ěr tīng wéi xū, yǎn jiàn wéi shí

Explanation: Listen to Rumors are unreliable, only seeing them with your own eyes is true.

Source: Liu Xiang of the Han Dynasty, "Shuoyuan·Zhengli": "What you hear with your ears is not as good as seeing it with your eyes; what you see with your eyes is not as good as walking on it."

The meaning is opposite. The eight-character idiom: Those who obey me will prosper, those who go against me will perish

Pinyin: shùn wǒ zhě chāng, nì wǒ zhě wáng

Explanation: Shun: obey; Chang: prosperous; Ni: To violate; to perish: to perish. If you obey me, you will exist and develop; if you disobey me, you will perish. Describe the dictatorship of the exploiting class.

Eight-character idioms with opposite meanings: share blessings and share misfortunes

Pinyin: yǒu fú tóng xiǎng, yǒu huò tóng dāng

Explanation: Refers to adversity Be harmonious and economical. "We share blessings and share hardships."

Eight-character idioms with opposite meanings: If you gain the Tao, you will get many help; if you lose the Tao, you will get few help

Pinyin: dé dào duō zhù, shī dào guǎ zhù

Explanation: Tao: morality; Widow: few. If you stand on the side of justice, you will get support and help from the majority of people; if you go against justice, you will be isolated.