Traveling across mountains and rivers, beating gongs and drums in the morning, chasing waves, wearing frost and walking on ice, running around, unstable, travel-stained, camping out, hungry and thirsty.
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idioms solitaire
Running around, coming out of slavery, remonstrating, remonstrating, arguing like a stream, fleeting, will die of you, you will be an adult, day and night, flying snow at the city gate, grasping the snow, inviting the right to take bribes, taking bribes in parallel, marching to move the crowd, floating mountains, roaring mountains and seas, arrogant and romantic, month.
Beads are shining, extraordinary splendour is getting new, banquet is new, cheating, cheating, worrying, quiet inside, grinding water, mentoring wall, willow flower, residual soup, wearing water, mourning Artemisia, confusing eyes, ecstasy, shaking soul, shaking head and tongue gun.
Worry is not far away, cross the ocean, make great achievements, sit tight, be doomed in previous lives, be full of crises, be alarmist, make a fuss, stand out from the crowd, stand out from the crowd, have muddy bones, separate flesh and blood, leave home, get gold in the soil, get silk in the gold, and get jade in the jade.
Smart all my life, generation after generation, generation after generation, more and more arrogant, rushing to the top, coming and going, hard-won, changing places, taking care of yourself, rewarding the merits, admiring a hundred, eloquent, babbling, long-winded.
Four character idioms
Exposing poles everywhere, a China idiom, pinyin is Ji ē Gā n ē Q ǐ, which means people's uprising, and it comes from Han Jiayi's On Qin.
Three friends and four friends, a China idiom, pinyin is sā n pé ng sí y ǒ u, which means all kinds of friends. From Wake Up the World, Volume 5.
Famous all over the world, China idiom, pinyin is yá ng mí ng sü hi, which means famous all over the world. Also known as world-famous
Wandering around, looking in all directions, is an idiom in China. Pinyin is páng huáng sì gù, which means wandering around and looking in all directions. Describe indecision. Excerpted from Ho Choi's thoughts on ancient times.
Doubt, doubt and confusion, a China idiom, pinyin is yí sān huò sì, which means people are suspicious.
China's idiom "four fail to defeat six" means that a few people cannot overcome the opinions of the majority. Talking from Shen's Distinguishing the Suburbs of Shandong.
Four hundred and four diseases, China idiom, pinyin: sě b ǐ i sǐ b ǐ i sǐ b ǐ, which means the disease of four seasons in all limbs; Generally refers to various diseases. From the Three Kingdoms Pinghua.
Including the four seas and China idioms, the pinyin is náng kuòh?I, which means to unify the whole country. From On Qin.