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What idioms are too general and wrong?
Let bygones be bygones

Interpretation of idioms: strange: strange. No longer pursue past mistakes or guilt.

The origin of the idiom: "The Analects of Confucius Eight Shu": "Don't talk, don't admonish, let bygones be bygones."

Now that he has admitted his mistake, we can let bygones be bygones.

Baao xιn carrying firewood to put out the fire Ji Hu:

Interpretation of idioms: Metaphor means to eliminate disasters in the wrong way, and as a result, disasters will expand.

The origin of the idiom: "Historical Records Wei Shijia": "Besides, a husband works for Qin with land, just like carrying firewood to put out a fire. His salary is endless and the fire does not go out."

Punish without teaching

Idiom definition: teaching: education; Punish or kill. Execute without warning. That is, if you don't educate people in advance, you will be punished if you make mistakes.

The origin of the idiom: "Xunzi Guo Fu": "Punishment without teaching, the complexity of punishment, the invincible evil; If you teach without punishment, you will not punish traitors. "

Example: Adults gave them three months to quit smoking, so they can be lenient with the deadline, and they can't bear to be punished if they don't teach. (Qing Li garbo "officialdom in the sky" back to the twentieth)

Day and night changes, zhāo guò xī gǎi g m: I g m: i.

Idiom explanation: description corrects mistakes quickly.

The origin of the idiom: The Biography of Zhai Fang in Han Dynasty: "A gentleman changes with the times."

Don't publish the theory of BKā n ZH and Lù n Lù n.

Idiom definition: periodical: cut out. In ancient times, words were written on bamboo slips, and if there were mistakes, they were cut out. Refers to correct and unchangeable remarks.

The origin of the idiom: Han answered Liu Xinshu: "It is a book that hangs in the sun and the moon and is not published."

Therefore, smart people are the source of prosperity. This is also the theory that the sun and the moon are not published. (Yan Fu's "Yuan Qiang")

Non-Tanger m:I Qián FüI before confession

Idiom explanation: pain: thorough; True or false: wrong. Completely correct the mistakes made before.

The origin of the idiom: Ming Ling Mengchu's "Surprised at the second moment, the foolish son is very annoyed": "If you repent, I will live in this house with your husband and wife."

Encouraged by the policy, he is determined to repent thoroughly and turn over a new leaf.

Confuse right from wrong.

Idiom explanation: deliberately saying right is wrong, and wrong is right.

The origin of idioms: the power of literature and its relationship Tao Qing Zeng You said: "Blur what you see and know, confuse right and wrong."

Example: Those people often deliberately confuse right and wrong, which has a bad influence.

Don't cover the sky with one hand. Benoit Heshangyang

Idiom definition: to: because; Qi: negligence, mistake; Cover up: cover up, cover up; Morality: virtue. Don't erase a person's great achievements just because he has individual mistakes.

The origin of the idiom: Thirty Years of Zuo Zhuan Xi Gong: "Besides, I don't want to hide my greatness with a pen."

Duizhengzhiyao, a drug for treating accidents.

Idiom explanation: drugs aimed at the root of the disease. Metaphor is a corresponding method to correct shortcomings and mistakes.

The origin of the idiom: Biography of Three Kingdoms Wei Zhi Hua Tuo: "Officials Ni Xun and Li Yan stopped having headaches and body heat, and suffered the same pain. He said,' If you look for the present, you will sweat.' Or it is difficult to make a difference, saying,' Seeking external reality and delaying internal reality should be treated differently'. In other words, every medicine has Mingdan and Shengdan. "

If there is, change it; If not, encourage Y ǒ u zé g m: I zh: and w ú zé ji ā mi m: n.

Idiom definition: then: just; Supplement: supplement. If there are shortcomings and mistakes pointed out by others, correct them, if not, use them to encourage yourself.

The origin of the idiom: The Analects of Confucius: "Zeng Zi said,' Save yourself three times a day'." Song Zhuxi's Notes: "Ceng Zi saved his life from these three aspects. If there is something, it will be changed, and if there is nothing, it will help. Its autonomy is so sincere that it can be said to be the foundation of learning. "

Example: according to the opinions and criticisms put forward by students, self-check, correct if there is one, and encourage if there is none.

Let the world go crazy, xi and David

Idiom explanation: wrong: wrong, wrong. Do what everyone in the world thinks is wrong. Refers to doing bad things regardless of public opinion.

The origin of the idiom: "Zuo Zhuan's eleven years of hiding from the public": "If you make five mistakes and attack it inappropriately, will you lose your teacher?"

Example: Because the initiator dared to openly use this counter-revolutionary order and swept the world, he must have the determination to completely collapse and surrender. (Mao Zedong's "Orders and Talks for the Southern Anhui Incident")

Don't hesitate to correct your way.

Idiom explanation: stingy: pitiful. Correct mistakes firmly and without hesitation.

The origin of the idiom: Shang Zhong Patent: "It's never too late to mend." Tang Luzhi's Interview with Courtiers by Words: "Tang is king because he said,' Don't do to others what you don't want others to do to you.' Words can also be trained. "

Picking pearls on the mountain

Idiom explanation: go up the mountain to pick pearls. Metaphor means doing things in the wrong direction and method, and certainly can't achieve the goal.

The origin of the idiom: "The Story of Liu Xuan in the Later Han Dynasty": "Xinghua makes sense, just like seeking fish in the wood and climbing a mountain to collect pearls."

Kill b Jia oérā if you don't teach.

Idiom definition: teaching: education; Kill: to punish, kill. Execute without warning. That is, if you don't educate people in advance, you will be punished if you make mistakes.

The origin of the idiom: The Analects of Confucius Yao Yue: "Killing without teaching is abuse."

Example: Treating people who make mistakes should be the policy of saving lives, not killing them without teaching.

Great fallacy

Idiom explanation: fallacy: absurdity, error; Ran: So, so. All wet, not at all.

The origin of the idiom: Han Sima Qian's "Report to Ren Shaoqing": "But it's ridiculous."

Exodus: On the surface, it seems that calling the Red Army can remove the party representative, which is really a big mistake. (Selected Works of Mao Zedong, Jinggangshan Struggle).

Seek no merit, but no fault.

Idiom explanation: do not seek merit, only seek no fault.

In a word, under the present circumstances, I don't want success, but I want nothing. ("China's Notes on Late Qing Literature" the second time)

Make the same mistake, d m:o q \f \u

Idiom explanation: dance: step on; Cover: upside down; Track: The track of a car refers to the road. Take the road of others' rollover again. Metaphor does not accept the lesson and repeats the mistakes made by others.

One small step makes a lifetime. I hate y and sh and zü chengqiā n g incarnation hens.

Idiom explanation: once you make a serious mistake or fall, it will become a lifelong regret.

The origin of the idiom: Yi's Liang Mingji: "Since Tang Jieyuan Yin was abandoned, the poem said,' One small step laughs through the ages, and one turn is a hundred years old'." "

Example: I know this chess game is of great importance, and I must not make mistakes in the end. One short step makes an everlasting regret! (Chen Zude's "Beyond Self")

One is what y and zh and wè I Shè n are.

Idiom explanation: very: too much. Doing it at once is too much. Metaphorical errors cannot be repeated.

The origin of the idiom: "Zuo Zhuan Xi Gong Five Years": "Golden can't rise, but you can't fight. What is this? What is it? "

The revival of old ideas

Interpretation of idioms: Meng: Start, happen. Old ideas or concepts have returned. More refers to repeating old shortcomings or mistakes.

The origin of the idiom: The Roar of the Lion by Wang Ming Tine: "Although this woman is released today, I am afraid that her old ideas will revive, which will do a lot of harm."

Make up for the disadvantage b ǔ pi ā n Ji B.

Interpretation of idioms: bias: deviation; Disadvantages: praise. Remedy deviation loopholes and correct shortcomings and mistakes.

The origin of the idiom: "The biography of Dong Zhongshu in Han Dynasty": "Before Wang Zhidao, there must be something, so politics can't be done, and it is also to make up for its disadvantages."

Example: If you don't follow the picture on this page, you can only mend it and steal it for a while. (Yan Fu's "Yuan Qiang")

Li Qiu's father-in-law Li Qizhang

Idiom explanation: It is a metaphor for people who are trapped in hallucinations and fall into mistakes without observing their true feelings.

The origin of the idiom: Lu's Spring and Autumn Annals suspected: "There are Li Qiubu in the north of Liangbei, and there are strange ghosts, like the nephew of Kundi. Li Qiu's ghost helped his son and made him suffer. ..... The father-in-law was confused by his son and killed his own son. "

Some wrong thoughts and deeds are not bound, and spread everywhere.

Idiom explanation: refers to some wrong ideas, words and deeds that spread everywhere without restraint.

carry firewood to put out a fire

Interpretation of idioms: Carrying firewood to put out the fire. The metaphor is to eliminate the disaster in the wrong way, and the disaster will expand as a result.

The origin of the idiom: "Han Feizi" says: "When the country is weak and chaotic, it is private to interpret the national law, but to put out the fire with a negative salary, which is very weak in chaos." "Historical Records Wei Shijia": "Like carrying firewood to put out the fire, the salary is endless, and the fire does not go out."

Ex.: If you listen to Zhuge Liang's words and fight hard to mobilize the A soldiers, it is also called fire fighting with negative pay. Idioms that describe errors and their explanations What are the idioms that describe errors and their explanations? (Ming Luo Guanzhong's Romance of the Three Kingdoms, the 43rd time)

Going back to the past, it costs a lot of money

Idiom explanation: dance: step on; Front trace: the trace of the previous wheel running over. Re-step on the marks of previous wheels. Metaphor is not to learn lessons and not to make mistakes again.

The origin of the idiom: The Biography of Dou Wu in the Later Han Dynasty: "I don't want to lose the present past, but follow the track of the car."

Example: Emperor Wen's spirit is yin, and he appears in the daytime, so Emperor Yang is also chilling and does not dare to repeat the same mistakes. (Chu people in Qing Dynasty won Chapter 39 of Romance of Sui and Tang Dynasties)

Broken cans and broken falls.

Interpretation of idioms: Metaphors have shortcomings and mistakes, but instead of correcting them, they deliberately develop in a worse direction.

Change for the good, g m: g m: i guo qi ā n sh à n

Idiom explanation: correct your mistakes and become excellent. Refers to evil is good.

The origin of the idiom: Zhouyi: "A gentleman moves when he sees good, and changes when he gains it."

To err is human.

Idiom explanation: In the old society, it was inevitable that ordinary people made mistakes.

The origin of the idiom: "Zuo Zhuan Gong Xuan Two Years": "No one has made a mistake, but he can correct it, and he can't correct it well."

A drop in the ocean is a drop in the ocean. Sh and zh and haolí, miù yǐ qiān lǐ.

Interpretation of idioms: millimeter and centimeter: two tiny units of length. A small mistake at the beginning will lead to a big mistake.

The origin of the idiom: Interpretation of the Book of Rites: "The Book of Changes says,' A gentleman is cautious at the beginning, and if he makes a mistake, he will make a thousand miles.' "

Example: Mr. Sun regarded him as a scholar first, and then as a jester. Now it seems that it is really "missing thousands of miles away"! (Wen Yi, my Qu Yuan problem)

I can't help myself.

Interpretation of idioms: pull: get rid of. Can't take the initiative to get rid of pain, mistakes or sins.

Idiom origin: Liu Chuan in Song Dynasty: "The Sai-jo striker went to Xinting to fight with him, so he was always around and could not extricate himself."

Exodus sentence: China entered the WTO, but it was infected again. Although you have wisdom, you can't extricate yourself. (Liang Qing Qichao, The Relationship between Novels and Group Governance)

Stubborn Wan Gubihu

Idiom definition: change: change. Insist on mistakes and refuse to repent.

Example: say I am stubborn and rehabilitate the guerrillas; Despise the central authorities and disturb the morale of the army. (Chapter 6 of Liang Xin's From Slave to General)

If you have heard of it, you will be happy.

Interpretation of idioms: excessive: negligence; Then: just. Welcome and be happy to hear others criticize your shortcomings or mistakes. Refers to accepting opinions with an open mind.

Idiom source: "Mencius Gongsun Chou": "Everyone knows that I am happy."

I'm afraid of illness and medical treatment.

Idiom definition: taboo: taboo; Avoid: fear, fear. Conceal one's illness and refuse treatment. Metaphor is hiding one's shortcomings and mistakes for fear of criticism.

Idiom origin: Song Zhou Dunyi's "Zhou Zitong's Book Guo": "Today's people have it, which is not gratifying. For example, it is better to avoid medical treatment than to be destroyed. "

For example, a person who is afraid of illness and medical treatment cannot correct his mistakes.

go wrong

Idiom explanation: error: confusion; Go astray: the wrong way. Be incited to go astray.

However, the defendant and others are young, ignorant and misguided, and they are not worthy of sympathy. Lu Xun's essay on Jieting was written in the middle of the night.

You will know when you listen to both, but it is dark when you listen to it. Ji ā n t and ng zé mé ng, piān xìn zén n.

Idiom explanation: it means that you must listen to opinions from all sides at the same time in order to correctly understand things; If you only believe one-sided words, you will inevitably make one-sided mistakes.

The origin of the idiom: Fu "On the Light and Shade of Hidden People": "You understand because you listen to it; Everything so black is biased. "

For example, Wei Zhi in the Tang Dynasty said, "Listening to others is bright, while being eccentric is dark." (Mao Zedong's On Contradiction)

Correct the mistake, Jing CuO jio CuO.

Idiom explanation: it means that if something is done wrong, go on doing it according to the mistake.

Idiom origin: Song Shi Puji's "Five Lights Meeting Yuan": "Making mistakes is bliss in the West."

Ex.: If you find mistakes in your work, you should correct them immediately, but you can't.