Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - How to write the new word Tian Zai Tian in the grid

How to write the new word Tian Zai Tian in the grid

The writing method of Tian Zai Tian is as shown below:

Pinyin tiān? Radical big? Stroke 4? Five elements fire five strokes GDI

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1. Sky: top ~ standing on the ground. When the sun rises, it turns red.

2. Located at the top; erected in the air: ~ shed. ~ window. ~ Bridge.

3. The twenty-four hours of day and night, sometimes refers specifically to daytime: today~. After the winter solstice, ~ is getting longer and longer.

4. Used to calculate the number of days: every ~. Second~. Three to three nights. You've been busy. Let's go to bed early in the evening.

5. A certain period of time in a day: the fifth update~. ~It’s still early.

6. Season: Spring~. Cold~. Three volts~. Huangmei~.

7. Weather: cloudy~. ~Sunny. ~It’s cold.

8. Natural; born: ~ sex. ~ Capital. ~Foot.

9. Nature: ~ disaster. People will win~.

10. Surname.

Extended information

Related vocabulary

1. Curse the world

Idiom Pinyin: mà tiān zhòu dì

< p>Explanation of the idiom: Cursing without specifying the target

Idiom source: Chapter 2 of Jia Pingwa's "Pregnancy": "There are rumors in the village that the tomb of an ancestor has been stolen, and they are cursing heaven and earth."< /p>

2. All over the sky

Pinyin of the idiom: màn shān biàn dì

Explanation of the idiom: Mountains and fields are all over the place, describing numerous and dense ones

Origin of the idiom: Chapter 88 of "Water Margin" by Shi Naian of the Ming Dynasty: "I went up to Gaofu to watch the Liao soldiers. They were so huge that they came from all over the sky."?

3. The price is all over the sky

Idiom Pinyin: màn tiān kāi jià

Idiom explanation: Infinitely random pricing

Idiom source: A Ying's "The Book Market of the City God's Temple": "The pricing of the City God's Temple is unreliable. They are asking for prices all over the sky, so you must pay them back on the spot and slowly discuss it with them. ”

4. Bargaining in secret

Idiom pinyin: mán tiān. tǎo jià

Explanation of the idiom: Hide the sky: the sky is full, meaning unlimited; bargaining: refers to the seller asking for a price.

Asking for high prices without limit

Idiom source: Qing Dynasty? Chapter 14 of "The Scholars" by Wu Jingzi: "This fits the old saying, 'Have a price hidden from heaven and pay back on the spot'. I say two or three hundred." Just say twenty or thirty taels of silver!"