1, sentimental: good: easy; Good (Hao); Feeling: sad. Easy to worry and feel sad. Describe people's emotional fragility. Generally used as predicate and attribute.
2. Hey: Hey: Walking with a limp. It is inconvenient to walk, and it looks crooked.
3, the face of the scorpion: the face is thin. Describe the appearance of hunger and fatigue, and refer to a thin person.
4, light and heavy inversion: set: put; Swing. Inverted the important and minor pendulums. Used as a derogatory term. Generally used as predicate, object and attribute.
5, painstaking: spit: spit; Li: Didi. Metaphor is painstaking. Mostly used in literary and artistic creation or research. It also means to pour out the truth or embrace sincerity. With praise. Mostly used in literary creation; It is also suitable for other mental work. Often used in predicate, attribute and adverbial.
6. Poverty and disease: Poverty and disease are in the body together. Subject-predicate type; As predicate and adverbial; It is very difficult to describe the living conditions.
7. Hemiplegia: Sui: Shun; Ruyi; Refers to energy activity. Half the body can't move freely. Refers to people suffering from diseases such as wind bias; Hemiplegia Generally used as predicate, object and attribute.
8. Frustration: Describe weakness and depression.
Idioms describing poor health.
1, sallow and emaciated: face: face; Muscle: muscle; Of the body. Yellow complexion; Thin figure. Describe a person who has been ill for a long time, weak or malnourished. Describe a person's face is bad. Generally used as predicate, attribute and complement.
2, weak: gas: interest; Sound; Strength: strength; Spirit. Describe the weakness of strength; Mental exhaustion; Sometimes they say they have no energy to do things. Used to describe a tired person; Hungry or very ill. Generally used as predicate and adverbial.
3, premature aging: aging when still young. It refers to premature aging caused by mental or physical overload. Used to describe people's mental outlook and mental state; Not angry. Generally used as subject and predicate.