The four-character idiom ends with the word "person".

1. Four-character idioms ending in herringbone:

Give up yourself for others,

Nobody's watching,

Arrogance,

A blockbuster,

Successor,

Complaining about others,

Alone,

The appearance is not amazing,

Preemptive strike,

Saving lives,

Compassion for others,

Be controlled by others,

Domineering,

Aggressive,

Let things go smoothly,

A preemptive strike,

Measure people by themselves,

See something, think of some people,

The situation is urgent,

Vomiting blood,

Be hindered,

Naive girl,

Convince people by reasoning,

Judge yourself,

Judge a book by its cover,

Completely different,

Self-deception,

Talent and beauty,

Dirty lies,

keep secret

2. Four-word idiom: Things are at the beginning, people are at the end, and talents are abundant.

rén cáI jáu

There are many explanations: many appearances. There are many talented people.

The source of the book "Great Mo Yu": "There are many people, and I am willing to listen to their fate."

Structural subject-predicate form.

Usage is as a compliment. Generally used as subject, object and attribute.

An active and healthy economy; Can't be pronounced "j".

Distinguish between shape and economy; Can't write "self".

Synonym talents come forth in large numbers

Antonym talent powder

There are a large number of doctoral students and master students in the Academy of Sciences. Is the main researcher of various disciplines; It really is ~.

3. Idioms Daquan Four-character idioms have only two four-character idioms, one with a character at the beginning and several characters at the end-many people, few people.

1, many people, few people

Len dos cuesho

It shows that there are many people seeking official positions and few people are vacant. Vacancy, originally refers to the vacancy of official position.

2. The land is vast and the population is sparse

rén yān xèshèo

Interpretation of human settlement: refers to households. Refers to a small number of households.

Ming anonymous "Yang Jiajiang Romance" Volume IV: "This place is long and deep, sparsely populated. Go to Qiancun and ask the family to stay for one night and go up the mountain tomorrow morning. "

Structural subject-predicate idioms

Used as predicate and attribute; Refers to low population density.

Synonym desolation

The antonym is densely populated.

Chapter 4 of Li Yingru's "Wildfire and Spring Breeze Fighting Ancient City": "After passing through rugged buildings such as cigarette factories, slaughterhouses and dilapidated houses, we came to a sparsely populated suburban park."

English translators are sparsely populated.