Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - There are nets on the lawn and gongs in the sky.

There are nets on the lawn and gongs in the sky.

There is a net on the top and a net on the bottom-surrounded by heavy.

Tianxun

Explain Luo Tian: a net for catching birds in the air. There are nets in the sky and underground. Refers to the encirclement set in the upper and lower directions. Metaphor enemy, fugitives, etc.

The source of "Da Song Xuan He Dispatch" Henderson: "It is difficult to leave the house, and it is worth the wind and rain." Yuan Anonymous's Lock the Mirror is the third fold: "If the heavenly soldiers are out of tight encirclement, don't leave two holes of demons."

Structural combination.

Usage description France's net is tight or surrounded everywhere; It's hard to escape. Generally used as object and subject.

Pronunciation; It can't be pronounced "Lu Bu".

Shape-distinguishing net; Can't write "help".

Synonym Skynet is long, sparse but not leaking.

The antonym ran away.

The difference between ~ and "The Law Can't Escape" lies in: ~ emphasizing encirclement everywhere; There is a meaning of "the French Open is restored, sparse but not leaking"; However, "the French open is restored, but it is not leaked" only emphasizes that it is impossible to escape the sanctions of the French open; It doesn't mean "tightly surrounded"

Example (1) laid by public security personnel ~; Criminals cannot escape.

(2) We set ~; These criminals cannot escape.

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