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The meaning and meaning of congcong

The original meaning of "smart" is sensitive hearing and smart. Parents use "Cong" as their name, which means sensitive, alert, clever and clever.

1, cong, first-class Chinese characters? It is pronounced "c not c not cōng", which means good listening. Another example: Congcha (good at judging); Congcha Xuanang (seeing the truth clearly, with extraordinary manners); Listen attentively (better than listening; Bright and discerning). Hearing: Deafness. ? Sensitive hearing: you can hear and see clearly. Quick thinking: smart. Conray. Smart. Smart.

2, with easy from the original, also. -"Shuo Wen" listening series. -"Book Hongfan" heard it and was judged to be smart. -"Guan Zi Zhou He" is very clever. -"Zhuangzi Foreign Things" is still ignorant. -"Poetry Feng Wang Rabbit" Smart, smart enough to listen, smart enough to smell things and judge their meaning. -"Spring and Autumn Stories, Five Elements and Five Things"

Zhan is eight years old, smart and lovely. -"The Romance of the Three Kingdoms Zhuge Liang Chuan" Smart people don't use their tricks. -"Enough is enough" is disrespectful. -"Poetry Zhou Song Respect" Cong Zhe (smart and wise); Being clever is mistaken by cleverness (people who are gifted with cleverness are mistaken by cleverness); Smart (meaning smart, smart)

4, smart: high talent, strong memory, strong understanding. Sun Qiulu is smart and kind, respectful and courteous, and Jiang Biao is a hero. -"Purple Tongzhi Sword" Smart people: hearing and vision are sensitive. Smart eyes and ears. Satire at a man's tricks will only hurt himself. Smart and keen. The voice of Germany is allowed to plug in and the people are looking forward to it. Yi Er Jia Shu, with Gan Tang Xi. Look down on it.

Introduction to hearing and vision.

1, wit, China idiom, pronounced R c not ng m not ng, refers to the sensitive response of ears and eyes, and describes clear mind and keen eyes. From Han Jiaogan's The Need of Yilin. Although he is nearly old, he is still hale and hearty, which is the result of long-term physical exercise.

2. As predicate, attribute and object; Describe a clear mind. Source: Han Jiaogan's "Yilin is in need": "The eyes are clear, the generals are benevolent, and the saints are auxiliary."