Meaning:
In the past, it was described as a rich sacrifice. Later, it was also described as delicious food.
Word sound:
Sang sang w incarnation
Don't eat good rice or chopped meat-you are very picky about food.
Are you right?
Idiom allusion: disgust: satisfaction; Meat: finely cut meat. The finer the particles, the better the meat quality. Describe the food carefully.
The origin of the idiom: The Analects of Confucius and the Rural Party: "If you fast, you must change your diet and move your residence. I am not tired of eating fine, and I am not tired of eating fine. "
For example, "Don't eat if it's not right" is an old-fashioned rule of his old gentleman, but the rule of "fine food is not greasy, fine food is not greasy" is a bit strange. (Lu Xun's "Southern accent and northern mobilization, by China women's feet ...")
Aili steamed food
I love you
Idiom allusion: steamed pear. For example, you don't know the goods. You screwed up the good thing.
The origin of the idiom: Liu Yiqing in Shuo Wen Jie Zi New Things in the Southern Song Dynasty: "Every time people in Huannan County are unhappy, they say,' If you want to grieve for pears, should you stop steaming them?' "
Exquisite yaozhuan
Ban Zhuo Yong
Idiom allusion: refers to exquisite dishes.
2. What words describe "nutrition"? 1. Eight Baoyu eats bā zhēn yù shí.
Generally refers to exquisite dishes. From the West Chamber in Jieyuan, Jindong, Volume III: "Eight Baoyu invites Lang to eat, and a thousand words are good for business."
2. Delicious food
Fine and delicious food or delicacy also refers to personal definition of delicacy. Describe food, full of praise. Gourmet refers to exquisite meals and delicious food, describing food as very delicious. There is a poem in Bird Yang Hao's "Green Pavilion and Self-Harmony": "Give your children respect and smile, and you will get a pair of delicious food, koi fish."
3. Three Sacrifices and Five Dings
It shows that the initial description of sacrifice is rich. Now describe food as rich and beautiful. From Yuan Gaoming's Pipa Story Cai Gong forced Uncle to try: "Sacrifice five pots every morning and evening, and you will surely sip water."
4. Never tire of food, never tire of food.
Tired: satisfied; Meat: finely cut meat. The finer the particles, the better the meat. Describe food that has been refined and carefully cooked. Since fasting will change food, the family will move around. Never tire of food, never tire of food. The Analects of Confucius and industrious villages and towns
5. Mountain skin and water, mountain color and water
This refers to the delicious food produced in the mountains and rivers. Later it was called delicious. From Poems of Yuefu, Lyrics of Yanshe III and Yuan Qu of Sui, Tang and Yuan Dynasties: "The Tao is high, the things are plentiful, and the mountain skin is rich in water."
3. What words are used to describe "nutrition"?
Meaning:
In the past, it was described as a rich sacrifice. Later, it was also described as delicious food.
Word sound:
Sang sang w incarnation
Don't eat good rice or chopped meat-you are very picky about food.
Are you right?
Idiom allusion: disgust: satisfaction; Meat: finely cut meat. The finer the particles, the better the meat quality. Describe the food carefully.
The origin of the idiom: The Analects of Confucius and the Rural Party: "If you fast, you must change your diet and move your residence. I am not tired of eating fine, and I am not tired of eating fine. "
For example, "Don't eat if it's not right" is an old-fashioned rule of his old gentleman, but the rule of "fine food is not greasy, fine food is not greasy" is a bit strange. (Lu Xun's "Southern accent and northern mobilization, by China women's feet ...")
Aili steamed food
I love you
Idiom allusion: steamed pear. For example, you don't know the goods. You screwed up the good thing.
The origin of the idiom: Liu Yiqing in Shuo Wen Jie Zi New Things in the Southern Song Dynasty: "Every time people in Huannan County are unhappy, they say,' If you want to grieve for pears, should you stop steaming them?' "
Exquisite yaozhuan
Ban Zhuo Yong
Idiom allusion: refers to exquisite dishes.
4. Idioms describing nutrition Idioms describing nutrition Idioms about nutrition include five idioms describing nutrition.
Idiom title idiom explanation
The color of vegetables is a metaphor for people's malnutrition in famine years.
Source: Jin Panyue's "Gopher": "The wild has dishes, and the DPRK replaces them with farming ranks."
Yellow-faced woman, thin muscle, yellow-faced woman, thin figure. Describe malnutrition or disease.
Source: Wang Xiyan's Diaphragm: "In the concept of this rural child, refugees should all be people with yellow faces and thin clothes."
Pale and emaciated, yellow and emaciated. Describe people who are malnourished or sick.
Source: Yuan Anonymous's "One-horned Cow" is the first discount: "Brother, you are so yellow-faced, how can you win?"
The pale face described the appearance of malnutrition due to hunger.
Source: Book of Rites: "Although there are fierce droughts and floods, the people have no food." "Xunzi Guo Fu": "Therefore, ten years of water, seven years of soup, there is no food in the world."
People have food: hungry face. Describe the malnutrition caused by hunger.
Source: Hanshu Yuan Di: "Years are worse than disasters, and people have food."
5. The idiom describing balance is seven levels and eight stabilities: Q and pí ng bā w ě n, which are very stable and the object is in a state of balance. As predicate and attribute; In a state of equilibrium.
Judging the air balance: Jiàn kūng héng píng, it is still clear that it is balanced. As predicate and attribute; Used to do things.
Salted plum: tiá o jí yá n mé i, salted plum: seasoning. It is a metaphor for coordinating and balancing different forces and factors, and more refers to the responsibility of the prime minister. Later, it also refers to mediating family conflicts. As predicate and attribute; Used to do things.
Mother and son: zǐ mǔ xiāng quán, mother and son: in ancient times, heavy money was called mother and light money was called son. Metaphors are light and heavy, and as objects and attributes, they maintain a certain balance; Used in written language.
Gain and loss: ·?(débéBenjamin chóu shě, the gain cannot compensate for the loss. To "not worth the loss." As predicate, object and attribute; Refers to the imbalance of income and expenditure.
Loss of excess and deficiency: xshíshdù, loss of excess and deficiency: disorder. The imbalance between reality and reality is used as predicate and attribute; Used in written language.
6. Nourishing words. Nourishing words.
More common are three sacrifices and five ding.
Meaning:
In the past, it was described as a rich sacrifice. Later, I also described the food as beautiful.
Word sound:
Sang sang w incarnation
Don't eat good rice or chopped meat-you are very picky about food.
Are you right?
Idiom allusion: disgust: satisfaction; Meat: finely cut meat. The finer the particles, the better the meat. Describe food that has been refined and carefully cooked.
The origin of the idiom: The Analects of Confucius and the hard-working township party: "fast food will change, and the residence will move." Fine food is not greasy, fine food is not greasy. "