Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - What do you mean you're not worried about anything?

What do you mean you're not worried about anything?

Alarmist is an idiom, pronounced as q ǐ ré n y not u ti ā n, which means always worrying about unrealistic things.

Usage: as predicate, attributive and adverbial.

Synonym: making much ado about nothing, worrying about people, worrying about sleep.

Antonym: carefree, as if nothing had happened.

Idiom truth: worry about the sky.

Extended data

Liezi Tian Rui: "There are people in Qi who are worried about the collapse of the world. They are sent to death, abandoned to sleep, and abandoned to eat." Later, it was a metaphor for unnecessary anxiety. In the Qing Dynasty, Shao Hengchang's poem "Current Affairs of Guarding the City" said: "Even the news may not be true, and people are worried."

This fable, through alarmist stories, tells us not to worry about those unrealistic things. This is an educational fable that describes two kinds of people: those who worry about the sky and those who worry about others. The author doesn't care about these two kinds of people.

This fable satirizes those who have no ambition and suffer from loss. "Nothing is impossible to a willing mind." We should never be "modern alarmists", but be ambitious and open-minded, and devote ourselves to study and work in order to realize our lofty ideals. This enthusiastic person's explanation of the fable of heaven, earth, star and moon is unscientific and can only represent the level of understanding at that time, but his spirit of caring for others and patiently inducing is still commendable.

The original intention of the idiom is that individuals in the State of Qi are afraid that the sky will fall, and it is often used to describe unnecessary or unfounded worries and anxieties.

References:

Baidu Encyclopedia-Worried about the sky