Idiom: cover your ears and steal the bell.
Pinyin: y language
Interpretation: cover: cover, cover; Steal: steal. Steal the bell and cover your ears for fear that others will hear you. Metaphorically, you are deceiving yourself, and you must try to cover up what you can't cover up clearly.
Idiom story:
Once upon a time, a man saw a big clock in front of his house and wanted to steal it. But the clock was too heavy to carry, so he took a hammer and tried to break it and steal it piece by piece. However, there is still a problem. Knocking the bell with an iron cone will make a loud noise and will definitely be caught. On second thought, you can hear the bell ringing, but if you cover your ears, you can't hear anything!
Stealing a clock: a metaphor for fools deceiving themselves.
"Lu's Spring and Autumn Annals: Self-knowledge": If there is a clock, if you want to be negative, the clock can't be negative. Destroyed by vertebrae, the bell rang. I'm afraid people will smell it and take it away, covering their ears.
Waiting for his story:
Idiom: Wait for the rabbit.
Pinyin: Shu zhdàI tù
Description: Plants: Roots exposed from the ground. The original metaphor is luck that you want to succeed without hard work. Now it is also a metaphor for sticking to a narrow experience and not knowing how to change it.
Idiom story:
During the Spring and Autumn Period, there was a farmer in Song State. He goes to work in the fields early every morning and doesn't put away his farm tools until the sun goes down. One day, the farmer was working hard in the field when suddenly a rabbit came from far away. Rabbits run faster and faster. Accidentally, the rabbit bumped into a big tree next to the rice field. The collision broke the rabbit's neck, and the rabbit fell to the ground and died on the spot. When the farmer saw this, he rushed forward and caught the dead rabbit in one hand. Then he happily packed up his farm tools and prepared to go home and cook rabbits. The farmer thought, since there are such good things under the sun, why does he have to plow hard every day?
From then on, he stayed by the big tree all day, hoping to wait until the rabbit was accidentally killed. But many days passed, and he didn't wait for the big tree to kill the rabbit. On the contrary, because he didn't treat the farmland, the field was full of weeds and became barren day by day.
The story of gilding the lily:
Idiom: gild the lily.
Pinyin: Hua shétiān zú
Description: Add feet to the snake when drawing it. It is not only useless but also inappropriate to do something superfluous. It is also a metaphor for fictional facts.
Idiom story:
During the Warring States period, there was a man in charge of the ancestral temple in the State of Chu. After the sacrifice, he sent wine to the people who worked under the ground, but there was not enough wine, so they came up with a way: everyone painted a snake on the ground, and the fastest person could drink.
One of them painted the fastest and was about to drink. Seeing that the others had not finished painting, he added feet to the snake. At this time, as soon as the other party finished painting, he snatched the wine from his hand and said, "The snake has no feet, so why add feet to it?" Then he drank wine.
Contradictory story:
Idiom: self-contradiction
Pinyin: zixiāng máo dün
Description: spear: a stabbing weapon that attacks the enemy; Shield: A shield to protect yourself. Metaphor is talking and doing things before and after the conflict.
Idiom story:
During the Warring States Period, there was a man in Chu who sold shields and spears. He boasted that the shields he sold were so strong that nothing could pierce them. He also boasted that the spear he sold was so sharp that nothing could be pierced by it. Someone on the road listened and couldn't help saying, "What will happen if you stab your shield with your spear?" Truman was dumbfounded at once, unable to answer his question.
The story of buying bamboo slips and returning pearls;
Idiom: I bought a gift and returned the pearl.
Pinyin: mi dujuan zh
Explanation: rafter: wooden box; Pearl: Pearl. Bought a business box and returned the pearls. Metaphor has no vision and improper choice.
Idiom story:
During the Spring and Autumn Period, there was a businessman in the State of Chu who specialized in selling jewelry. Once he went to Qi State to sell jewelry. For the sake of good business and best-selling jewelry, he specially made many small boxes with precious wood, which were beautifully carved and decorated, so that the boxes would give off a fragrance, and then put the jewelry in the boxes.
A man from Zheng saw the box containing the orb exquisite and beautiful. After asking the price, he bought one, opened the box, took out the treasure inside and gave it back to the jeweler.
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