1. Four-character idiom about being ignored
sarcastic lěng cháo rè fěng
[Definition] sarcastic: sarcastic words; harsh words; hot words Satire: A bitter and unbearable irony. Use sharp, pungent language to ridicule and satirize.
[Quotes] Yuan Mei of the Qing Dynasty, "Thirty-two Kinds of Suiyuan·Yu Yan outside the Paper": "Everyone knows it, and everyone has a sense of injustice. Therefore, the Jin Dynasty officials talked a lot, and they were both cold and hot. Satire. "The Strange Situation Witnessed in Twenty Years" by Wu Jianren of the Qing Dynasty: "The mother and the son left in a strange way; the uncle was embarrassed by the mockery."
[Shape Discrimination] Ridicule; cannot be written as "Chao".
[Synonym] Cold words, sarcastic words, cold words, ice people meeting each other sincerely
[Antonym] Treat sincerely and sincerely
[ Usage] is often used to describe accusations, sarcastic remarks or literary devices. Generally used as predicate, attributive, and adverbial.
[Structure] Subject-predicate formula.
[Analysis] ~ and "sarcastic words"; both can mean words with sarcastic meaning; but ~ contains the meaning of pungent ridicule; sarcasm is more mean; it is a neutral idiom; "sarcastic words" is derogatory. idiom.
[Example] Actively encourage students who are lagging behind; don’t~.