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.
Pronunciation: m m m m m m m m m m I dúHuán zh
Explanation: rafter: wooden box; Pearl: Pearl. Bought a business box and returned the pearls. Metaphor has no vision and improper choice.
Two idiom stories: buying gifts and returning pearls.
Story:
Legend has it that a jeweler in Chu State went to Zheng State to sell pearls. In order to attract customers, he made a beautiful box with precious wood. The box was inlaid with precious stones and emeralds, which looked very luxurious. One of Zheng's buyers paid a high price for the pearl box, opened the box, took out the pearls and returned them to the merchants in the State of Chu.
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.
Source: Everything is done by Han Feizi's Foreign Reserve: "Chu people have sold pearls to Zheng as a cabinet of Mulan, smoked with cinnamon, decorated with pearl jade, decorated with roses and woven with feather jade. Zheng people buy their coffins and return their beads. "
For example, make sentences: poor readers, ignorant elites, pity dross. What are the benefits of buying bamboo slips and pearls? If it were in the vernacular, there would never be this disease. Qing Qiu Liang Ting's "On Vernacular Writing as the Basis of Reform"
Pinyin code: mdhz
Synonyms: putting the cart before the horse, putting the cart before the horse, negative salary.
Antonym: remove the rough and extract the fine
Lantern riddle: the stupidest consumer
Usage: as predicate, object and attribute; Used in written language
English: Showing a lack of judgment is like a person buying shiny cookies and returning pearls to the seller.
Three four-character idioms
Imitate others and lose your personality.
Handan was the capital of Zhao during the Warring States Period. It is said that people in this place walk in a particularly beautiful way. Yan version of the state-owned youth took the trouble to come to Handan to learn from the people here. While observing the walking posture of Handan people, he learned to imitate. But in a few days, he couldn't hold on. The more he studied, the more awkward he became, and the more unnatural he walked. Not only did I not learn to walk in Handan, but I forgot my original walking movements. I had to climb back to Yan State. Handan toddler: toddler: learning to walk is a metaphor for mechanically copying others and joking.
Buy the box, but return the pearls.
During the Warring States Period, a businessman from the State of Chu went to Zheng to sell jewelry. He made a box out of good wood, smoked it with spices, carved a vivid rose pattern, inlaid with jade, pearls and jade ornaments, dressed it up extremely exquisitely, and then put an extremely precious pearl in it. No-later, a buyer came. He saw this box and liked it very much. So he bought it. However, the buyer opened the box, took out the pearls and returned them to the merchant, leaving only with the box. Buy bamboo slips and return them to pearls-bamboo slips: wooden cases. Metaphor, or improper choice.
Four idiom stories about buying bamboo slips and returning pearls.
10, a person who doesn't care about the essence. You can't just look at the surface. Everything should be prioritized. It should be a flower blooming on real fertile soil, satirizing those who only pay attention to form and over-decorate their appearance. 3. Everything should be prioritized and the appearance value should be higher than the commodity value. The "value" he appreciates is the artistic beauty of the box, so he doesn't need any exterior. The essence is the most important thing. But from another point of view, it is more important to pay attention to the content and the stupid things that are not chosen properly. Obviously, the value of pearls has been submerged, and the result of over-valued "packaging" is to usurp the role of master, but the real beauty should not be artificially carved. In order to show that pearls are more valuable, otherwise they can only give up the basic model. People who make bad choices. 9. Scenes that warn people to prioritize. 1 1 is also used to describe improper selection. 8. It is a common technique in magic and military to cover up one's true "intention" with gorgeous "packaging". The person who buys a gift should be a person who pays attention to appreciating art and has high artistic attainments. Therefore, he should be an extraordinary modern artist or art collector and businessman, paying too much attention to appearance and describing himself as short-sighted. It means that he shouldn't pay too much attention to appearance and appearance, but he has lost a truly valuable treasure. Don't be confused. Zheng's eyes are only fixed on the exquisite box, which makes the price of goods increase a lot. It can be used to describe that some manufacturers make the value of decorative appearance higher than the value of beads for profit, and the seller of rafters got "beads" with a "rafter"! 6. Also use the metaphor of inversion and modernity to show that if a thing is really beautiful: 1, otherwise it will be like Zheng Man, who "buys gifts and returns pearls", and can't do things that put the cart before the horse but are not recognized by the world.
The general idea of the idiom "five buy bamboo slips and return them to pearls"
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.
The original intention of returning pearls is to buy jewelry, leaving only beautiful boxes and no real high-value jewelry. This is a metaphor for short-sighted people. It's from Han Feizi's "On the Left".
(5) Extended reading of the four-word idiom story "Buy Bamboo Slips and Return the Pearl":
Some Chu people sold their pearls to Zheng. They are Mulan's cabinets, preserved with cinnamon, decorated with pearls and jade, and decorated with jade. Zheng bought bamboo slips and returned pearls. It can be said that it is good to sell bamboo slips, but not pearls.
There is a Chu man who sells jewelry in the state of Zheng. He carved a pearl box with precious Mulan, smoked it with cinnamon pepper, decorated it with jewels and jewels, connected it with beautiful jade, decorated it with jade and connected it with kingfisher feathers.
A man from Zheng bought this box, but returned the beads in it to him. It can be said that this jeweler is good at selling boxes, but not good at selling jewelry.
Revelation: Zheng people only pay attention to appearance but not to inner absurdity, and Chu people's lack of priority also makes them afraid to sell pearls. It tells us to proceed from reality.
Han Feizi was born in the thirty-fifth year (about 28 1 year BC) and died in the fourteenth year of Qin Dynasty (233 BC). Han Fei was the son of Han Gongzi (the monarch), the Han nationality, and was born at the end of the Warring States Period (now Xinzheng, Henan).
Learn from Xunzi, a famous philosopher, thinker, political commentator and essayist in ancient China, and a master of legalist thought, later known as "Zi Han" or "Han Feizi", and a representative of China's famous legalist thought in ancient times.
Six idiom stories: buying bamboo slips and returning pearls
Buy bamboo slips and pearls,
That is to say, after a person buys an expensive piece of jewelry,
He finally returned the jewels,
There is only one beautiful box left.
Seven idiom stories: buying bamboo slips and returning pearls
1 phonetic m m m: i dú hu á n zh
It is said that there was a jeweler in Chu State who went to Zheng State to sell pearls. In order to attract customers, he made a beautiful box out of precious wood. The box is also inlaid with precious stones and emeralds, which looks very luxurious. One of Zheng's buyers paid a high price for the pearl box, opened the box, took out the pearls and returned them to the merchants in the State of Chu.
The Chu people sold their pearls to Zheng, that is, Mulan's cabinet, cinnamon smoked, pearl jade decoration, rose decoration and feather jade decoration. Zheng Guoren bought the jewelry box and returned the pearls. Everything is wrong, and the foreign reserve says left.
4 explanation: wooden box; Pearl: Pearl. Bought a business box and returned the pearls. Metaphor has no vision and improper choice.
⑤ Usage as predicate, object and attribute; Used in written language
6 similar words put the cart before the horse, put the cart before the horse, negative salary.
7 antonyms from coarse to fine
Idioms show that people who are not good at reading are ignorant elites and pity dross. What are the benefits of buying bamboo slips and pearls? If it were in the vernacular, there would never be this disease. Qing Qiu Liang Ting's "On Vernacular Writing as the Basis of Reform"
9 Other uses As far as drama is concerned, in order to facilitate singing and appreciation, it is required that the sound cavity is smooth and the rhyme is natural and reasonable, which is higher than other artistic styles. However, if we blindly pursue the harmony of rhythm and rhyme, treat the emotional intention of drama as a dispensable thing, and sacrifice the emotional content in order to abide by the formal rules, that is to buy gifts and return pearls.
Eight idiom stories: buying gifts and returning pearls.
The story of buying bamboo slips and returning pearls.
He is from the State of Chu and has a beautiful pearl, which he intends to sell. In order to get a good price, he tried his best to package the pearls. He felt that with noble packaging, the "identity" of pearls naturally rose.
The Chu people discovered the valuable Mulan, and invited skilled craftsmen to make a box (that is, a bamboo raft) for the pearl, and smoked the box with cinnamon spice. Then, on the outside of the box, many beautiful patterns were carved and inlaid with beautiful metal lace. It looks shiny. It's really a delicate and beautiful handicraft. In this way, the Chu people carefully put pearls into boxes and took them to the market to sell.
Soon after arriving at the market, many people gathered around to admire the Chu people's boxes. A Zheng people hold the box in their hands and can't put it down for a long time. Finally, he paid a high price for the Chu people's box. Zheng paid the money and came back with a box. But he came back after a few steps. The Chu people thought that Zheng people regretted returning the goods. Before the Chu people could finish thinking, Zheng people had come to the Chu people. I saw Zheng people take pearls out of the open box and give them to the Chu people, saying, "Sir, you left a pearl in the box. I'll return it to you when I come back." So Zheng gave the pearl to the Chu people, then looked down at the wooden box and went back.
The Chu people stood there awkwardly with the returned pearls. He thought others would appreciate his pearls, but he didn't expect the exquisite outer packaging to exceed the value in the box, so that "a presumptuous guest usurps the host's role" made the Chu people laugh and cry.
Zheng people only pay attention to appearance and ignore essence, which makes him make improper choices. The "over-packaging" of the Chu people is also somewhat ridiculous.
Nine idioms about buying bamboo slips and returning pearls.
Idiom:
Buy the box, but return the pearls.
Pinyin:
rice grain
stop
Juan
zhá
Explanation:
Rafters: wooden cases; 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.