Wandering Earth Book Good Words

Good words: colorful, thunderous, ecstatic, singing and dancing, brilliant, spring flowers, spring garden, bright spring, spring, spring, spring, spring, spring back to the earth, excited, fill the sea with guards, fools move the mountain, hundred folds, courageous, flesh and blood, pain and itch, mountains of people, love is like the sea, grace is like a mountain, step by step, by the shallow into the deep, day by day, old and know the new, The mountains and hills, the green leaves become shade, the sky grows long, the tree has big roots, free and easy, people do not have far-flung worries, there must be near worries. Part of the word specific explanation:

I. colorful

Meaning: describes the bright colors and numerous patterns.

Origin: Southern Dynasty Liang-Jiang Yan's "Li Color Fugue": "Five lights hover, ten colors land."

Translation: bright colors and numerous patterns.

Two: ecstatic

Describes being happy to the extreme. Ecstatic: happy; if: as if; mad: out of control.

Pinyin: xīn xǐ ruò kuáng

Origin: Tang Du Fu, "Hearing the Officials' Army Collecting Henan and Hebei": "But look at where the wife's sorrows are; the roaming volume of poems and books wants to be wild with joy."

Translation: Looking back at his wife and children, he has also swept away the clouds of sorrow, and casually rolled up the books of poetry, and the whole family was overjoyed.

Three: Carrying songs and dances

Adjective describing a scene of joy.

Laden with songs and dances is an idiom with the pinyin zài gē zài wǔ.

Origin: Malachimov's "The Grassland of Flowers": "The herdsmen, with their old and young in tow, were laden with songs and dances, and they gathered from all directions toward the meeting place."

Four: Spring Colors Fill the Garden

Explanation: The garden is full of beautiful spring scenery. It is a metaphor for a thriving scene.

From: Song Ye Shaoweng's "A Visit to a Small Garden is Not Worth It": "I should feel sorry for the clogs printing moss, and I have not been able to open the wood door for a long time. Spring colors are all over the garden, and a branch of red apricots comes out of the wall."

Translation: Perhaps the owner of the garden was worried that my clogs would trample on the moss he cherished, and knocked gently on the wood door, but no one came to open it for a long time. But it doesn't matter; the garden can't be shut out of spring; the sprigs of red apricots that peek out over the wall have already given away the ominous colors of spring.

Fifth, Jingwei fill the sea

meaning: ancient myth. In the old days, it was used as a metaphor for having deep hatred and actively trying to take revenge. Later, it was used as a metaphor for the determination to defy difficulties and not to stop until the goal is achieved.

Pronunciation: [ jīng wèi tián hǎi ]

Origin: Jin-Tao Yuanming's poem "Reading the Classic of Mountains and Seas": "Jingwei is holding a small wood; he will fill the ocean with it."

Interpretation in vernacular: Jingwei contains tiny pieces of wood, which he will use to fill up the ocean.