The pinyin of Qiao: qiào.
Words for orifice: back orifice, heart orifice, ignorant, knack, open orifice, orifice, seven orifices, clear orifice, ghostly orifice, flawless orifice, orifice chisel, middle orifice, orifice, guitouguanqiao, jiqiaopiao Wind, orifice, worm orifice, key point, key qi, arcana key, mark key, knowledge and knowledge key, worm key and fly cry, money-obsessed heart key, three souls leaving the key point, no knowledge key, heaven key, key key, unreasonable key One orifice, joint orifice, machine orifice, orifice orifice, spiritual orifice, kidney orifice, fly-sounding orchid orifice, gap orifice, lower orifice, deqiao, cold-resisting orifice, orifice orifice
Idioms containing orifice: Wind blows in the orifices, exquisite orifices in the seven orifices, bleeding in the orifices in the seven orifices, fire in the orifices in the seven orifices, smoke in the orifices in the seven orifices, one orifice is blocked, earthworms orifices are buzzing, flies are buzzing in one orifice, one orifice is blocked, money is obsessed with the mind, officials are obsessed with the mind, ghosts are obsessed with the mind, solid gourd has no orifice, three souls come out of the body, phlegm is obsessed with the mind, The sound of flies and earthworms, knowledge of machines, three corpses jumping violently, smoke from seven orifices, three corpses exploding randomly, smoke from seven orifices
Idioms are stereotyped words in Chinese vocabulary. Idioms are spoken by everyone, and they are made into words, so they are idioms. Most idioms have four characters, but there are also three, five or even seven or more characters. Idioms are a major feature of traditional Chinese culture. They have fixed structural forms and fixed sayings, expressing a certain meaning. They are used as a whole in a sentence, taking on the subject, object, attributive and other components.
A unique fixed phrase that has been used for a long time in ancient Chinese vocabulary, derived from ancient classics or works, historical stories and people's oral stories. The incisive meaning of an idiom is often hidden in its literal meaning, and is not a simple sum of the meanings of its constituent components.