What idioms begin with "tree"?

1, a monument is erected.

Pronunciation is sh sh b I lüzhàn

Explanation: It originally meant to engrave someone's life story on a stone tablet or write a biography, so that his reputation can be passed down from generation to generation. Now the metaphor is to establish personal prestige and improve personal prestige.

Source: Biography of Huan Bin in the Later Han Dynasty: "Cai Yong and others discuss his preface; He thinks Bing is an outstanding person. .........................................................................................................................................................................

The tree fell and the sun scattered.

Pronunciation: shùdùoús nàn?

Interpretation: When the tree falls, the monkeys on the tree are scattered. Metaphor once the backer collapses, followers will disperse in a hubbub.

Source: Song Pang's "Talking about Yao's Wife": "Song is subordinate and the official position is assistant minister. ..... Brave, desperate and unyielding. When he died, De sent someone to write a letter and unsealed it. It was an article called "The Tree Fell Away". "

3. Shuzi

Pronunciation:? Vincent Siew

Interpretation: We must strive to realize the moral benefits of the whole people.

Source: "Shangshu Tai Shi Xia": "Xiu De is virtuous and does everything except evil."

4, the tree catches the wind

Pronunciation: shdàzhāo fēng

Interpretation: Its physical principle is the same strong wind. When it acts on a big tree, because the leaves of the big branches are thick and many, and the stress area is large, the force is large, and the effect of the wind is more obvious. It is a metaphor that people who are famous or rich are easy to attract attention and get into trouble.

Source:? Ming, Wu Cheng'en, and Journey to the West: "This is exactly what a big tree shakes, and people die because of their high fame."

5, the tree wants to be quiet but the wind does not stop.

Pronunciation: sh ü y sh ü y ü j ü ng é r f ng b ü zh ǐ

Interpretation: it means that objective things do not depend on people's subjective consciousness, or that the situation is contrary to people's wishes; When I used to sigh that my children should be filial, my parents had passed away. This is a metaphor for the helplessness of losing parents, which embodies the concept that filial piety is the first of all virtues. Later generations used "the sorrow of the wind tree" as a metaphor for bereavement.

Source: Biography of Han Poetry, Volume 9: "The tree wants to be quiet but the wind does not stop, and the child wants to raise it but not close."