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Vocabulary-rich idioms
All idioms containing the word "dui" and their explanations;

Accumulate jade and pile up gold-there are so many treasures that you can pile them up. Describe the accumulated wealth.

Drill old paper piles-old paper: refers to ancient books. Refers to blindly studying ancient books, divorced from reality. Also called "drilling old paper" and "delving into old paper".

Joan is made of jade. Metaphor like white jade things gathered in one place.

Build by laying bricks or stones red and pile up green-describe the flourishing flowers and trees in spring.

Heap mountains and accumulate the sea-pile mountains like the sea. The original description has a lot of wealth. It is also a metaphor for many things.

Accumulate gold and jade-there are so many gold and jade that you can pile them up. Describe having a lot of wealth.

() Build a treasure-describe a lot of wealth.

Pile up into mountains-pile up in piles, like hills. Describe a lot.

Pile up several cases-pile up: pile up. Case: desk. Official documents, letters, books, etc. All piled up on the table. Originally refers to a large backlog of diplomas waiting to be processed. Later, it also means that there are many books or written materials.

Flowers-describe colorful, colorful.

Old paper pile-refers to a large number of old books and materials. It is derogatory. Metaphor means that people are immersed in studying ancient books and don't know the world.

Heap gold and jade-describe wealth.