Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - What are the words about travel?

What are the words about travel?

1, travel across mountains and rivers

Pronunciation: bá shān shè shu

Interpretation: Lushan Mountain: over the mountains and mountains; Wade: wade across the river with your feet. Crossing mountains and mountains, wading across rivers. Describe the hardships of walking a long way.

Source: The Book of Songs, Wind and Pool: "I am worried when the doctor trudges." Twenty-eight years of Zuo Zhuan's "xianggong": "After wading through mountains and rivers, I was met by first frost."

Sentence making: After wading through mountains and rivers, I finally reached my destination.

2. Take a quick look at the flowers

Pronunciation: z ǒ z ǒ zǒu mǎ guān huā ā

Interpretation: Running on a horse. Look at the flowers on the running horse. The original description is that things are going well and I am in a good mood. Take a quick look at the back.

Source: Meng Jiao's "After Graduation" poem: "The spring breeze is proud of horseshoe disease, and you can see all the Chang 'an flowers in one day. "

Sentence: this visit to the museum is just a cursory look, and there is no time to look closely.

3. Call a friend

Pronunciation: h péng yǐn bàn

Explanation: It means to call friends and attract companions. This is a China idiom.

Source: Zhu Ziqing's short essay "Spring"

Sentence: Xiaoming will call his friends for an outing as soon as he has a holiday.

4, the wind hides and sleeps.

Pronunciation:

Interpretation:? Sleeping in the wind. Describe the hardships of traveling or field work. ,

Source: Fan Chengda's "Yuan Ri": "Hungry and sleepy are lazy; Sleep in the wind for half your life. "

Sentence: Geological team members waded through mountains and rivers, camped in the wind, and searched for mineral deposits for the motherland.

5. Prosperity

Pronunciation: x and x and r m: ng r m: ng

Interpretation: Xixi: the appearance of harmony; Bustling: the appearance of chaos. Describe people coming and going, very lively and crowded.

Source: "Historical Records and Biography of Huo Zhi": "The world is bustling, all for profit; The world is bustling, all for profit. "

Sentence: The streets are busy, but orderly.

6, non-stop

Pronunciation: mübütíng tí

Interpretation: It is a metaphor for going forward without stopping.

Source: Wang Shifu's "Li Chuntang" is the second fold: "He won a game and beat him non-stop."

Sentence: I haven't seen enough of this scenic spot, so I have to go to the next one without stopping.