Meaning: Guess a person with a mean heart and a noble character.
Source: Twenty-eight Years of Zuo Gong: "I am willing to take the belly of a villain as a gentleman's heart, just annoying."
2, swollen face filled with fat.
Meaning: To save face, do something beyond your power.
Source: Yao's "Li Zicheng" Volume 1 Chapter 18: "Dude, don't play the fat man in front of my old Zhang, and don't ask friends to help you."
3. The roads are different and there is no common goal.
Meaning: Don't be with people with different interests.
Source: From the Analects of Confucius Wei Linggong (15.40): "Different Tao, no common goal." Synonym is that there is no common goal.
4. Be tolerant and forgive.
Meaning: Don't be too heartless and leave room for others.
Source: Tu Yuji: "There is a Taoist chess game in Baoxin County, Cai Zhou, and people are often spared first. His poem says:' When you leave the cave, you are invincible, but you can forgive others, and you can forgive others.' "
8, many lines of injustice will be hanged.
Meaning: if you do too many unjust things, you will inevitably bring your own destruction.
Source: From Zuo Zhuan Yin Gongyuan: "Many lines of injustice will be hanged, and the daughter-in-law will treat you." Idiom.
9, the saddle does not leave the horse's back, A does not leave the body.
Meaning: The horse can't unload its saddle, and people can't understand its armor, which shows that it has been in a state of high vigilance.
Source: From The Change of Han and General Cemetery, Volume I of Dunhuang Change Collection, it is described as being on high alert.
1 1. Hungry people don't know whether they are full or not.
Meaning: For example, you can't think from the perspective of a person in trouble.
Chapter 45 Li returned to the officialdom: "I missed my errand and hit a nail!" If you are full, you don't know if you are hungry. "
Expand the understanding of proverbs in the materials;
It is a concise phrase widely circulated among the people, which mostly reflects the practical experience of working people and is generally passed down from mouth to mouth. Most of them are easy-to-understand spoken short sentences or rhymes.
Ready-made words commonly used in people's lives. Proverbs are similar to idioms, but colloquial, easy to understand, generally express a complete meaning, and there are almost one or two short sentences in form. Proverbs include a wide range of agricultural proverbs, such as "planting melons and beans before and after Qingming"; Some are rational proverbs, such as "As you sow, you reap"; Some common sense proverbs belong to all aspects of life, such as "walk a hundred steps after dinner and live to be ninety-nine". There are many kinds.
Proverbs, like idioms, are part of the whole language and can increase the uniqueness and vividness of the language. But proverbs and famous sayings are different. Proverbs are the practical experience of working people, and famous sayings are said by celebrities.
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