Idioms with the character melon

Contains all idioms and explanations of the word "melon":

Follow the vines to find watermelons - follow the melon vines to find watermelons. It is a metaphor for investigating something based on a certain clue.

Counting east melons and talking about eggplants--describes words that are wordy and endless.

The year of breaking melon - the character melon can be divided into two characters, so old poems and articles call a woman's sixteenth year "the year of breaking melon".

Mianmian Guului——Mianmian: the appearance of continuation; Lu: small melon. Just like a continuous vine with many large and small melons. Quoted as wishing prosperity to descendants.

And replace it with melon - and: to. Send someone to take over next year when the melons are ready. Refers to being succeeded by someone else after the term of office expires.

Huangtai Zhigua - Huangtai: refers to "Huangtai Melon Ci", written by Li Xian of the Tang Dynasty, hoping to use this to understand that Emperor Gaozong and Wu Zetian could no longer depose the prince. The metaphor is unbearable.

Extremely familiar - describes reading or memorizing fluently and proficiently.

The first division of the character "melon" - in the old days, literati split the character "melon" into two eight characters to mark the year, that is, sixteen years old. Mostly used for women.

Melons and plums under the melon field - a metaphor for situations that easily arouse suspicion.

The melon fields are not suitable for shoes, and the plum trees are not decorated with hats. When walking through the melon fields, do not bend down to pick up your shoes; when passing under the plum tree, do not raise your hands to adjust your hat. Metaphor to avoid suspicion.

When the melon is ripe, the pedicle will fall off - pedicle: the part where the flower or fruit is connected to the stem. When the melon is ripe, the stem will fall off naturally. It means that once the time is ripe, things will naturally succeed.

The melon is cut open and the beans are split from the pod. It is a metaphor for the country being divided.

The suspicion of melons and plums - melons and plums: melon fields and plums. A metaphor for being in a position of suspicion.

Guaou Mianmian - Lu: small melon; Mianmian: the appearance of continuation. Just like a continuous vine with many large and small melons. Quoted as wishing prosperity to descendants. ( )

Sweet melon has a bitter stem - the stem of the melon is bitter. Metaphor: Nothing is perfect.

Floating melons and sinking plums - eating melons and fruits soaked in cold water. Describes the life of spending time in summer.

Picking melons and holding vines - a metaphor for sweeping away everything.

Follow the clues and find out the melons - a metaphor for investigating things based on a certain clue. Same as "follow the vine and learn the melon".

Nagua in the water - a metaphor for being incompatible and incompatible.

Underwater Nagua - describes the water that cannot be accommodated.

The gourd is hanging in the air - Confucius metaphorically said that he could not hang like a gourd so that no one could eat it, so he should serve as an official and make a difference. Later, it was used to describe a talented person who is not used by the world.

Li Xia Gua Tian - a metaphor for situations that easily arouse suspicion.

Lao Wang sells melons - a metaphor for praising yourself for the quality of your goods or your abilities.

Beans are cut open and divided - just like the melon is cut open and the beans are split from the pod. It is a metaphor for the country being divided.

The benefits of watering melons - a metaphor for repaying evil with kindness and not causing disputes over trivial matters.

Frying beans and picking melons - a metaphor for relatives killing each other.

Guangualiushui - describes speaking extremely skillfully and fluently.

Melons are divided into beans, which means the division is orderly.

A melon rind cannot match a plum tree. Refers to the forced recognition of relatives.

melons and vines—a metaphor for being involved in personnel affairs.

Guards are connected - melon and kudzu: they are both vines, and their vines can climb on other objects. ①It is a metaphor for social relationships that are tossing and turning. ②A metaphor for the relationship between two things or two people that are related to each other.