Idioms describing "striving for success" include: where there is a will, there is a way, success comes naturally, success comes, and you get what you want.
1. Where there is a will, there is a way.
Explanation: Ambitious people will succeed in the end. Tell us, life should struggle, and the wind and rain should persist.
Go ahead.
English translation: Where there is a will, there is a way.
Origin: Geng Yan (y m n) told Geng Yan (Liu Xiu), an old man in Linzi, Southern Dynasties: "The general is in Nanyang, so he built this grand plan.
It is often said that where there is a will, there is a way. "
Example: The story of "Cheating a meager salary and tasting courage" tells us that where there is a will, there is a way.
Second, work is natural.
Explanation: Generally speaking, if you work hard enough, things will naturally succeed. Used to motivate others to make progress.
Source: Wu Ming Cheng En The Journey to the West Forty-three times: "This master is just homesick! If all three lines are full, what's the difficulty! often
As the saying goes,' success is natural'! "
Constant efforts will surely succeed;
Bilingual example:
The test index of hard qigong is skill performance, and you can test your skills through performance.
English translation:
Show your strength.
Third, success is g not gōng chéng míng jiù.
Explanation: It means that achievements have been established and fame gained.
Usage: as predicate, object and attribute; About merit and fame.
English translation: reputation
Bilingual example:
After her success, she was still reluctant to leave her beloved Liverpool.
Fame didn't keep her away from her favorite football.
(1) Extended reading of successful idioms
Famous sayings about hard work and harvest:
1. Labor is the ladder for human beings to succeed. Without labor, there is no gain. —— Ma Yanmei
2. How can I get it if I don't work? How to get it if you don't work? Only pay will get it, only labor will get it. -summer
3. Only by hard work can you gain, talk less and do more work, and work hard. -Zhan Dunhong
4. People's success needs hard work and sweat. Only through hard work can they obtain and realize the life value they pursue.
-Jiang
5, no pains, no gains, to get a good harvest, we must work hard. -Xu Teli
6. Knowledge comes from hard work and any achievement is the result of hard work. -Soong Ching Ling
7. Where there is a will, there is a way. -Biography of Geng in the Later Han Dynasty
8. Sincerely add, stone opens. -Biography of Ten Kings of Guangwu in the Later Han Dynasty
What idioms are there to describe a lot of gains?
There are: fruitful results, bumper crops, returning home with a full load, benefiting a lot, fragrant rice overflowing, fish throwing insects, glad you came, trees blooming and so on.
What are the idioms of harvest?
Flowering and fruiting: Originally, it means that there is harvest after sowing and cultivation. Now let's say that the work is progressing and effective.
No gains: gains: gains. Not even a grain of rice was harvested. More refers to the failure of harvest due to disaster.
Return empty-handed: nothing: full load; Return: Return. Return with a full load. Describe the harvest is extremely rich.
No pains, no gains. I worked hard, but I didn't get the reward I deserved.
Longkou grabbing food: refers to grabbing food in rainy days during the harvest season.
Return with full load: full load: all over the ground; Return: Return. Return with a full load. Describe the harvest is extremely rich.
Return with a full load: load: load; Return: Come back. Come back and pretend to be full. Describe a bumper harvest.
Fame and fortune: gain: gain. Be famous and make money.
Harvest in autumn and store in winter. Generally refers to traditional agricultural activities.
Autumn harvest and winter storage: autumn is the harvest season of crops, and winter is the storage of fruits needed for one year. Metaphor is a year of farming.
There is not enough daily plan, but more annual plan: not much is calculated every day, but a lot is calculated every year. Metaphor makes a mickle. It is also a metaphor that as long as you persevere in everything, you can gain a lot.
If you go back to Baoshan empty-handed: Baoshan: the mountain of treasure. This is like the metaphor of going to Baoshan and not getting the treasure, but returning empty-handed when you should have gained a lot.
Than studying for ten years: than. More than ten years of hard work. Describe the great benefits of thought.
Teacher: teacher: study; Yi: Don't worry. Metaphor is good at learning. He didn't spend much time and gained a lot.
Ten things are not one: ten things are not successful. Metaphor is trying hard and getting nothing.
Flowers bloom on the tree: one of the "thirty-six plans" is also a metaphor for seeking profits from capital and getting nothing.
Not much: not much. It's not good.
Cattle are not as good as sheep: lose sheep and get cattle. Metaphor loss is small, gain is big.
Be sure to take three bets: four bets, one wins three bets. Metaphor has gained a lot out of thin air.
Difficult first, then: difficult: hard, hard; Gain: gain. Pay the labor first, then get the harvest. Metaphor does not sit back and enjoy the success.
Apricot leaves: flowers: flowering; Leaves: long leaves. When apricot trees bloom, calamus leaves. Refers to the best period of farming. Later, it was used to describe that if you don't go against the farming season, you will gain more if you farm in time.
Idle time: emptiness: no gain or achievement. Idle away one's time.
Look up and down: lower your head to pick up things on the ground and raise your head to pick up things on it. Describe every move has a harvest.
Look up and down: describe every move as rewarding. With "looking up and looking down".
A tree can win many things: a tree: planting. Plant once and reap a hundred times. Metaphor is to cultivate people's long-term benefits.
Nothing: nothing. Describe nothing.
What are the idioms of harvest?
Idioms describing harvest are:
1. Go home with a full load [m N 'Zaire] 1. Explanation: load: load; Return: Come back. Come back and pretend to be full. Describe a bumper harvest.
2. From: Li Mingzhi's "Burning Books to Bury Confucians": "However, Lin Runing served three times, and no one left, and returned with full load."
3. Example: Leave the treasury and people of Wei State with gold and millet, plunder them and fall into their battlements. ◎ Feng Ming magnum "History of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty" (Chapter 23)
Second, check [fǔ shy ǔ ng q ǔ]1. Description: lower your head to pick up things on the ground, and raise your head to pick up things on it. Describe every move has a harvest.
2. From: "Historical Records and Biography of Huo Zhi": "Home is about father, brother and children, and there is something to take back."
3. Grammar: combination; As a predicate; Describe extreme diligence and thrift
Iii. Flowering and fruiting [kāi huā jié guǒ] 1. Explanation: the original meaning is that after sowing and cultivating, there is no harvest. Now let's say that the work is progressing and effective.
2. From: Songshi Puji's "Five Lights Meeting Yuan" Volume 50: "Flowers and fruits are fragrant."
3. Example: The seeds are planted now, but they haven't germinated yet. It will be five or six years before they reach your mouth. ◎ Feng Ming magnum "So Say" Volume 1
Four, the dead sheep get the cow [wáng yáng dé niú] 1. Explanation: Throw away the sheep and get the cow. Metaphor loss is small, gain is big.
2. From: "Huai Nanzi said the mountain training": "If you get a cow after death, you will lose it."
Verb (the abbreviation of verb) is fruitful [shuò guǒ léi léi] 1. Explanation: Fruitful, big fruit. Accumulate a lot. Describe a lot of gains. It is also a metaphor for great achievements.
2. From: Qin Mu's "One Stone on the North of Guo Wang": "In the hands of different people, through hard work and full development of styles, various artistic achievements can be cultivated."
What idioms are there to describe harvest?
No crops, no crops: sowing; 30: Harvest the grain. Generally refers to not participating in agricultural production and labor.
Baoshan entered the mountains full of treasures and returned empty-handed. Metaphor according to the conditions, there should be rich harvest, but nothing (mostly knowledge).
Spring is long and summer is long, autumn harvest and winter storage are spring germination, summer growth, autumn harvest and winter storage. Refers to the general process of agricultural production. It is also a metaphor for the occurrence and development of things.
Take Tian Li's clothes: engage; 30: Harvest the grain. Refers to efforts to engage in agricultural production.
Pick up things on the ground, pick up things on it. Describe every move has a harvest.
The lucky money is not in the lucky money: the grain harvested by a cow; Deng: Mature and complete. A year of poverty and a year of famine.
Return with a full load. Describe a bumper harvest.
The daily plan is insufficient, and the annual plan is surplus. Not much every day, but a lot every year. Metaphor makes a mickle. It is also a metaphor that as long as you persevere in everything, you can gain a lot.
Lose the sheep and get the cow. Metaphor loss is small, gain is big.
Take three bets, four bets, and one person wins three bets. Metaphor has gained a lot out of thin air.
Easy first, then difficult: hard work, hard work; Gain: gain. Pay the labor first, then get the harvest. Metaphor does not sit back and enjoy the success.
Nothing, nothing. Describe nothing.
Look up, look down, pick up things on the ground, look up, pick up things on it. Describe every move has a harvest.
A gain is a gain: a little experience, a little gain; Merit: achievement. A little achievement.
Trees with many rewards: planting. Plant once and reap a hundred times. Metaphor is to cultivate people's long-term benefits.
Throw worms into the fish and fish with worms as bait. Metaphor is to gain more with less cost.
There are gains for both hands. Metaphor is to learn knowledge and collect more information.
I'm glad you came. It's empty and white. There is no time to run this trip. Means that some kind of action has gained something.
No harvest: good harvest. Not even a grain of rice was harvested. More refers to the failure of harvest due to disaster.
Autumn harvest and winter storage Autumn is the harvest season of crops, and winter is the storage of fruits needed for one year. Metaphor is a year of farming.
One of the "thirty-six plans" for flowering on trees. It is also a metaphor for seeking benefits from capital and getting nothing.
Idle away one's time: no gain or achievement. Idle away one's time.
As the tree, so the fruit. What you plant, what you reap. Compare what you did and what kind of results you got.
Autumn collection in the east [explanation] autumn harvest, winter storage. Generally refers to traditional agricultural activities.
Better than studying for ten years. More than ten years of hard work. Describe the great benefits of thought.
Pig eight quit to eat ginseng fruit without knowing the taste. It is also a metaphor for reading more and doing more, but actually getting nothing.
Complete set of idioms describing bumper harvest
There are many idioms to describe the harvest, such as returning home with a full load, fruitful results, benefiting a lot, a bumper harvest in the spring and autumn, returning home with a full load, and being amazed. I am glad that I have come, and I have benefited from the teacher's efforts twice, and I have been able to make both ends meet.
(6) Extended reading of successful idioms:
Idiom analysis:
First of all, come home with a full load.
Explanation: load: load; Return: Come back. Come back and pretend to be full. Describe a bumper harvest.
From: "Burning Books and Weakness": "However, Lin Runing served for three times, and no one left, and returned with a full load."
Vernacular: "But if you have just been the magistrate of Lin Ning for three times, he will not go to any of them, and he will definitely come home with a full load."
Grammar: formal; As predicate and attribute; Include praise
Second, fruitful results.
spell
Explaining the original meaning refers to the lush appearance of the fruit on the tree during the autumn harvest. Now it often means that someone has a lot of works and great achievements.
Over the past 700 years, there have been endless generations of descendants and talented people, and the imperial examinations in previous dynasties have achieved fruitful results. -chapter 13 of Huo Da's "mending the sky crack"
Synonyms have a lot to do, harvest a lot, return home with a full load, do a lot, harvest a lot, return home with a full load, and do a lot.
Antonyms get nothing, nothing.
Third, it has benefited a lot.
spell
Interpretation refers to the harvest is not small, there is a great harvest, generally refers to the ideological aspect.
The origin of Lu Yao's Ordinary World, Volume V, Chapter 25: "This kind of' lecture' also sells tickets and the works of the speaker, so that this kind of activity benefits all parties."
Synonyms benefit a lot.
Antonyms get nothing and know very little.
Four, a tree.
Explanation: Tree: Planting. Plant once and reap a hundred times. Metaphor is to cultivate people's long-term benefits.
From: "The Full Show of Guanzi": "A year's plan is nothing more than a tree valley; The ten-year plan is nothing more than a tree; Lifelong planning is nothing more than cultivating people. A tree gets a tree, and the valley is also; Ten wins in one tree, and wood is also; A tree is a winner, and people are also. "
Vernacular: "there is nothing better than planting crops in a year;" Nothing can compare with planting trees for ten years; There is nothing better than training and selecting talents all your life.
After a year of hard work, there will be gains, valley; Harvest after ten years of cultivation, tree-like; It is human nature to reap after a hundred years of hard work. "
Grammar: combination; Make an attribute; Include praise
Fifth, the late sheep get the cow.
Explanation: Throw away the sheep and get the cow. Metaphor loss is small, gain is big.
Said by: "Huai Nan Zi said the mountain training": "If you get an ox after death, you will lose it."
Vernacular: "A sheep can escape from a cow, so no one wants to lose it."
The antonym is not worth the candle.
What idioms describe success through hard work?
The iron pestle becomes a needle, fools move mountains, dripping water wears away stones, ropes are cut off, and streams continue to flow.
A, iron pestle into a needle [tiě chǔ chéng zhēn]
Explanation: Metaphorically, as long as you have perseverance and are willing to work hard, things will surely succeed.
From: the true "Mulian Save Mother 4 Liu's School": "Like an iron pestle grinding a needle, the heart is firm and there is a needle day."
Just like an iron bar grinding into a needle, as long as you are firm in your heart, you will succeed one day.
Second, Yu Gong moved mountains.
Explanation: Metaphor means persistently transforming nature and fighting unswervingly.
Said by: Liezi Tang Wen in the Warring States Period recorded that there were two big mountains in front of Gong Yu's house, and he was determined to level them. Another wise old man laughed at him for being too stupid and thought he could not do it. Gong Yu said: I have a son when I die, and a grandson when my son dies. My children and grandchildren will never end, and the two mountains will eventually be razed.
Three. constant dripping water wears through the rock—persistence leads to success
Explanation: Water keeps dripping, and stones can drip through. Metaphor as long as you have perseverance and keep working hard, things will succeed.
From: Luo Song Dajing's Record of He Lin Yu: "Zhang Guai's tooth is the order of Chongyang; An official came out of the library; There is a dollar under the towel. Good cliff employee. The official said,' A dollar for He Zudao? I am also a staff member! Guaya gave a sentence and said,' One dollar a day; Thousands of dollars a day; The rope was sawed off; Water droplets penetrate the stone. "
Translation: Zhang Guaiya made an order in Chongyang County; An official came out of the library; There is a dollar under the headscarf. Zhang Guaiyan's staff. The official said,' What's wrong with a dollar? You want to hit me! Zhang Guaiya wrote a sentence and said, "One dollar a day; A thousand days is a thousand dollars; If you keep sawing wood with a rope, the rope will break; Water can't stop dripping, but it can drip through the stone after a long time. "
Fourth, the rope sawed wood [sh é ng j ù man]
Description: You can also saw wood with a rope as a saw. Metaphor is weak, as long as you stick to it, things will succeed.
From: Luo Song Dajing's Record of He Lin Yu, Volume 10: "One dollar a day, a thousand dollars a day, rope sawing wood, water falling stone."
Translation: one dollar a day; A thousand days is a thousand dollars; If you keep sawing wood with a rope, the rope will break; Water can't stop dripping, but it can drip through the stone after a long time. '
Verbs (short for verb) run like water.
Explanation: It is a metaphor for saving property, so that it is often used. It is also a metaphor for doing one thing bit by bit without interruption.
Said by: Hao Popular Compiled Geography quoted from the Teaching Classics: "Diligence, like a trickle, can pierce the stone."
You always strive for perfection, for example, small water often flows, so you can penetrate the stone.
What idioms describe success through hard work?
1, heaven rewards hard work
(1) Interpretation: Heaven rewards diligence is an idiom in China, which means that God will reward everyone according to their diligence. More hard work, more harvest, as long as you pay enough efforts, you will definitely get the corresponding harvest in the future.
(2) Source: From the hexagrams in Zhouyi: "Heaven is healthy, and gentlemen are constantly striving for self-improvement; The terrain is Kun, and the gentleman carries things with morality. "
(3) For example, it is not necessary to be talented to reward hard work, and the efforts of the right place and the right time can achieve the final result.
2, iron pestle into a needle [tiě chǔ chéng zhēn]
(1) Interpretation: It means a promising academic or career, even if talented people study and do things, it is difficult to be smooth sailing. But as long as you have perseverance, are willing to work hard, keep a peaceful mind, persist in learning and doing, you will succeed in the end. Metaphor as long as you have perseverance and are willing to work hard, things will succeed.
(2) the source: the true "Mulian saves the mother 4 Liu's school": "If you grind the needle with a pestle; I have a strong heart. "
(3) Grammar: subject-predicate type; As predicate and object; With praise.
(4) For example: As long as you work hard, everyone knows the story of the iron pestle grinding into a needle, but it's your turn. Whether you can stand loneliness is often a big challenge.
3. Drops of water pierce the stone
(1) Interpretation: It means that water keeps dripping down, and the stone can drip through after a long time. Later, although the strength was small, as long as we persisted, we could succeed. Also known as "dripping water wears away the stone", it is often used with "rope saw"
(2) Origin: Zhang Guaiya was ordered by Chongyang (the name of the ancient county) to withdraw an official (money) from the library, depending on the fact that there was a coin (copper coin) under the silk scarf next to his temples as the money in the treasury. Lovely Cliff ordered the staff, and was even more furious (angry): "He Zudao, is it a staff for me?" You can stab me, but you can't cut me! "The strange cliff auxiliary pen judges the cloud:" One yuan a day, 1,000 yuan a day, a rope sawed off, a stone fell through! "Take the sword to cut it. (selected from He Lu)
(3) Grammar: subject-predicate type; As predicate and object; With praise.
(4) For example, the second thing that can replace impatience is the ability of practice to make perfect.
4. The rope saw is broken
(1) Interpretation: A rope can be used as a saw to saw wood. Metaphor is weak, as long as you stick to it, things will succeed.
(2) Source: From Luo Dajing's "He Lu" Volume 10: "One yuan a day, a thousand days, rope sawing wood, water falling stone."
(3) Grammar: as an object and a clause; Include praise
(4) For example, persistence is a kind of will and persistence is a kind of perseverance. The ancients said, "A drop of water wears away a stone, and a rope saws wood." That is, a kind of persistence. Persistence can win, and persistence can succeed. Be a person who insists on everything!
5. It's hard to get [xiān nán hòu huò] first.
(1) Interpretation: Difficulty: hardship, toil; Gain: gain. Pay the labor first, then get the harvest. Metaphor does not sit back and enjoy the success.
(2) Source: "The Analects of Confucius Yongye": "The benevolent, who is difficult first, can be described as a benevolent."
(3) Grammar: as predicate and object; Metaphor does not sit back and enjoy the success.
Idioms describing harvest
Idioms describing collection and copying.
1, autumn harvest in Tibet: autumn harvest, winter storage. Generally refers to traditional agricultural activities.
2. Return with load: A load: full load; Return: Return. Return with a full load. Describe the harvest is extremely rich.
3, Baoshan empty back: into the mountains full of treasures, but come out empty-handed. Metaphor according to the conditions, there should be rich harvest, but nothing (mostly knowledge).
4, fame and fortune: income: harvest. Be famous and make money.
5. Return with a full load: load: load; Return: Come back. Come back and pretend to be full. Describe a bumper harvest.
6, fruitful: fruitful, big fruit. Accumulate a lot. Describe a lot of gains. It is also a metaphor for great achievements.
7, eat three bets: four people bet, one person wins three people's bets. Metaphor has gained a lot out of thin air.
8. Full car: full: full ground; Return: Return. Return with a full load. Describe the harvest is extremely rich.
9. Look up and down: lower your head to pick up things on the ground and raise your head to pick up things on it. Describe every move has a harvest.
10, the late sheep get the cow: throw the sheep and get the cow. Metaphor loss is small, gain is big.
1 1, I'm glad you came: empty, white. There is no time to run this trip. Means that some kind of action has gained something.