Use the house to hide, use the house for two purposes, Han Xin believes that the more soldiers the better, use them freely, use troops with a thousand gold, seek time with a hundred gold, save enough wealth, use the house to hide, and use it with no use. Give up the Tao and use power, raise troops for a thousand days and use them for a moment, use your heart and mind, do not use two things, have no intention, use small talents but make great use, and apply what you have learned.
1. Idiom name:
行 Tibet Yongshe
Idiom pronunciation:
xíng cáng yòng shě
Idiom explanation:
行: do, implement. To hide; to retreat. Use: appoint. She: No need.
The source of the idiom:
The Analects of Confucius Shuer written by Lu and Confucius in the Spring and Autumn Period: "If you use it, you will do it; if you leave it, you will hide it. Only I and you have this husband."
Traditional Chinese idioms:
行hidden yongshe
Emotional color:
Neutral idioms
Idiom usage:
As predicate and attributive; used in written language
Idiom structure:
Union idiom
Era of production:
< p>Ancient idiomsSynonyms:
Using shelter to hide?
2. Idiom name:
One and two uses
Idiom pronunciation:
yī dā liǎng yòng
Idiom explanation:
One thing can be used in two ways.
Traditional Chinese idioms:
Use both ways
Commonly used:
Commonly used idioms
Emotional color:
Neutral idioms
Idiom usage:
Combined form; used as object and attributive; referring to one thing with two uses
Idiom structure:
Combined idioms
Era of production:
Ancient idioms
Idiom examples:
Your coat is in the daytime Wear it, cover it at night, and have two uses
3. Idiom name:
Han Xinbing, Duoduoyido
Idiom pronunciation:
hán xìn yòng bīng, duō duō yì bàn
Idiom explanation:
The more metaphors, the better. Same as "Han Xin generals, the more the better".
/p>
Traditional idioms:
Han Xinbing, Duo Duo Yi Do
Common usage:
General idioms
Emotional color :
Neutral idioms
Idiom usage:
As objects and clauses; the more metaphors, the better
Idiom structure: < /p>
Complex sentence idioms
Era of production:
Ancient idioms
Synonyms:
General Han Xin, the more the better?
4. Idiom name:
pronounced but useless
Idiom pronunciation:
zhōng kàn bù zhōng yòng
Explanation of the idiom:
It is a metaphor that looks good but is actually useless
Origin of the idiom:
Xu Dishan's "The Jade Official": "Guns and warships are like A bright weapon, but a good thing but not useful."
Common usage:
General idiom
Emotional color:
Neutral idiom< /p>
Idiom usage:
As predicates and attributives; referring to things that look good in appearance
Idiom structure:
Unional idioms
Era of production:
Contemporary idioms
Synonyms:
Like or not?
Idiom examples:
Ling Shuhua's "Yang Ma": "I don't want to buy things that are of no use."
5. Idiom name:
Easy to use
Idiom pronunciation:
yùn yòng zì rú
Idiom explanation:
Freedom: activities without hindrance. The description is used very skillfully and naturally.
Origin of the idiom:
Chapter 5 of "On Enlightened Dictatorship" written by Liang Qichao of the Qing Dynasty: "In an era when all countries were coexisting, the territory was slightly smaller, so the dictatorship could be strictly enforced and used freely."
Traditional idioms:
Easy to use
Common usage:
Commonly used idioms
Emotional color:
< p>Neutral idiomsIdiom usage:
Supplementary form; used as predicate; with complimentary meaning
Idiom structure:
Supplementary idioms
Era of production:
Modern idioms
Idiom examples:
He has a good grasp of these mathematical formulas, so he can use them in solving problems freely.