Degree of common use: common idioms, number of words: eight-character idioms.
Traditional: mantis catches cicada, and yellowbird follows, with the phonetic notation: ㄤˊㄤˊㄅㄨˇㄔㄢˊ, ㄏㄨˊ.
Short spelling: TLBCHQZH, structure: complex sentence idioms.
Age: ancient idiom, emotional color: derogatory idiom.
Source: Talking about the Garden: "There are trees in the garden and cicadas on the trees. Cicada sings and drinks dew, but I don't know mantis is behind; The mantis took the cicada and didn't know that the yellowbird was around. "
Grammar: mantis catches cicada, yellowbird is behind; Make provisions; With a derogatory connotation.
Example: you can't fight the border area. These two stories are reasonable, that is, "the clam struggles, and the fisherman gains" and "the mantis catches the cicada, and the yellowbird comes last".
Synonym: everything has its vanquisher.
The mantis catches cicadas and yellowbird makes sentences at the back.
1. At this time, all local governors and overlords wanted to unify the whole country in the name of crusade, but every mountain has its own height, and heroes from all walks of life were afraid of mantis catching cicadas and yellowbirds. If a crusade is launched, future generations will take advantage of it, so everyone will be quiet, but the undercurrent will surge.
2. Because of this, "the mantis catches the cicada, and the yellowbird is behind", and people catch people again, so the irony scene of being somebody else's "first day" and being somebody else's "Tenth Five-Year Plan" opens in broad daylight.
3. A small fish swallowed shrimp, but it didn't know that mantis caught cicada. The yellow bird fell behind and a kingfisher rushed down.
4. Ha ha, yes, this scene is really getting more and more exciting as Gouhun Jia said. Mantis catches cicadas and yellowbirds behind. Ok, now I'm really looking forward to the results of this evaluation.
5. As the saying goes, mantis catches cicada, and yellowbird is behind. Today, I will take all these untouchables back to prison.