Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Idiom describing people's capriciousness.

Idiom describing people's capriciousness.

The idiom to describe people's capriciousness is to chop and change.

go back on one's word

Pinyin: zhāo sān mù sì,

Interpretation: Smart people are good at using means, and stupid people are not good at distinguishing things. Later, they often said that they were willful and often changed their minds.

Originated from Zhuang Zhou's On Zhuangzi Wuqi. The original moral of this story is a clever irony of two kinds of fools, one is the manager and the other is the managed. The latter is ridiculous because' one leaf can't see Mount Tai'; The former, seemingly arrogant, used to do some "self-deception, expedient measures and delaying tactics" only to solve the immediate predicament, and naturally it was resented because it was not a long-term solution. Now, it extends to men who are fickle.

Fickle sentences:

(1) The fickle Li Ming often cheats girls.

(2) You should learn painting and photography for a while. Isn't that a fickle attitude?

(3) If you want to learn English for a while and Japanese for a while, you may not learn both well.

(4) If you study English for a while and then change to the piano, you probably won't be able to make sentences.

I have never seen such a fickle person.

She has always been decisive and not a fickle person. Don't wronged her any more.

(7) I am not a fickle little woman who treats you as a temporary gas station.

(8) Learning should not be fickle, but be down-to-earth and persistent.

How can he succeed if he keeps changing jobs?

(10) I know that you are not a fickle person, and you will act according to your promise.