The whole idiom

The idioms of whole are as follows:

Have a good time, reorganize the troops, get ready to go, break the whole into parts, reorganize the army, reorganize the old as new, reorganize the army, reorganize the army, make a complete set, The mountains are reorganized, the brigade is reorganized, the soldiers are reorganized, the bows are in order, the things are sorted out, the beetles are sorted out, the clothes are rectified, the world is rectified, the whole year is spent, the armor is repaired, the soldiers are reorganized, the hats and shoes are reorganized, the pieces are collected and integrated, the melon fields are not Under the Nalu Li, the crown is not trimmed, the clothes are trimmed, the face is trimmed, and the cut is trimmed.

"Zheng" is a standard first-class character (commonly used character) in modern Chinese. It is pronounced as zhěng in Mandarin. It was first seen in the Bronze Inscriptions era and is a pictophonetic character in the Six Books. The basic meaning of "rectification" is to be orderly and not chaotic, such as neatness and tidiness; the extended meaning is management, such as rectification and rectification.

In daily use, "Zheng" is also often used as an adjective, which means upright and dignified, such as straightening one's heart.

Explanation of idioms with "reorganize":

Renovate old things as new:? Repair old or damaged things to make them as new as new.

Full cut:? Describes dignity and seriousness.

Close your clothes and keep your appearance straight:? Organize your clothes and keep your appearance correct.

Year after month:? Year after year, month after month. Describes a long time.

The whole brigade is vigorous: training the army and motivating the soldiers.

Sit up straight with straight clothes:? Sit upright with straight clothes. Describes seriousness and restraint.

Armor repair:? Repair armor and repair weapons. It means being ready for war.

The whole thing is a metaphor for an action that easily arouses suspicion.

Resolve chaos and eliminate beetles: It means to rectify chaos and eliminate harmful effects.

Rectify Qiankun: Qiankun: the name of the hexagram, symbolizing heaven and earth, yin and yang, etc. Gover the country and bring order to chaos.

The whole set: means planned, organized and comprehensive.