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Idioms of deer and horse

What idioms are there about deer and horses? The following are idioms about deer and horses that I compiled. Welcome to read!

Interpretation of idioms in Red Deer;

It is a metaphor for people who act in a hurry and panic.

Idiom origin:

"The Remains of the West Lake" Volume 25: "Hangzhou people speak and behave in a hurry, saying that they are looking for red deer, and building four things is so scary that they jump at everyone."

Traditional idiom: red deer.

Emotional color: neutral idioms

Usage of idioms: as object and attribute; Four kinds of animals

Idiom structure: combined idioms

Interpretation of red line idioms:

From Zhao Gao's story that a deer is a horse, it is a metaphor to reverse right and wrong and confuse black and white.

Idiom origin:

Ye Fan, a Song Dynasty man in the Southern Dynasties, wrote "The Story of Cui Qi in the Later Han Dynasty": "If you can't help the disaster, you will want to change the color of the mysterious Huang Zhi, and the red deer is easy to shape?"

Traditional idiom: Red deer is easy to shape.

Emotional color: neutral idioms

Idiom usage:

Subject-predicate type; As complement and object; Metaphor reverses right and wrong

Idiom structure: subject-predicate idioms

Interpretation of the idiom "Red Deer" moving to the right;

This language refers to a deer as a horse. It means bullying and arbitrarily reversing right and wrong.

Idiom origin:

It is said that a deer is a horse.

Traditional idiom: maple moves red deer.

Degree of common use: common idioms

Emotional color: derogatory idiom

Idiom usage:

As objects and attributes; Used to do things

Idiom structure: compact idioms

Synonym:

Call a deer a horse? See more synonyms of red deer moving to the right >>

Examples of idioms:

When the mouth turns purple, power shifts to Red Deer, and Shan Gui dances during the day and cries at night. If he gets his feelings, he will be imprisoned. ★ Feng Ming Magnum "Think Tank Supplement, Wisdom and Emotion"

Interpretation of the idiom "refer to a deer as a horse";

Call a deer a horse. Metaphor deliberately reversed black and white.

Idiom origin:

Sima Qian's Historical Records of the First Qin Emperor in the Western Han Dynasty: "II laughed and said,' Is the Prime Minister wrong? Call a deer a horse. "

Traditional idiom: a deer is a horse.

Emotional color: derogatory idiom

Idiom usage:

Concurrent language; As predicate, object and attribute; derogatory sense

Idiom structure: verb-object idiom

Idiom pronunciation:

Refers to "zhí" and cannot be pronounced as "finger"; For cannot be pronounced as "for" or "wè i".

Synonym:

Confuse right from wrong? Reverse black and white? See more synonyms for calling deer a horse >>

Antonym:

Distinguish right from wrong? See more antonyms for calling a deer a horse >>

Examples of idioms:

Dong Chuang has already got a good husband. Why not exchange sheep for cattle? In the end, it's hard to call a deer a horse, even if the western neighbors are responsible. (Feng Ming magnum "wake up the world" volume 7)