Appreciation: The author deeply expressed his love for these little creatures with "small" and "endless".
2, it has a chest wing under the chest, shining in the sun, like a shining silver breastplate worn by a mighty general. ?
Appreciation: This sentence uses the rhetorical device of metaphor, so that the chest wings of the water beetle are vividly displayed in front of readers.
3. On the water, we can see a group of shiny "mussel spiders" twirling happily. No, that's not a mussel spider. Actually, it was a black bean bug having a party! ?
Appreciation: This sentence personifies the twisting of black bean worms, and intuitively shows many scenes of black bean worms in the pond.
Not far from here, there is a team of pond rays swimming here, and their paddling style is as fast and powerful as sewing needles in a tailor's hand. ?
Appreciation: vividly express the fast and powerful swimming movements of pond fish with vivid metaphors.
The water in the pool is shallow and warm, and the mounds above the water are like small islands.
Appreciation: The author's love for the pond is properly expressed by warm overlapping words.
6. Sometimes it will make a small sheath with tiny shells, just like a small white dress; Sometimes, it is also built into an ivory tower-like nest by rice grains, which is its most gorgeous residence. ?
Appreciation: The author uses vivid metaphors and anthropomorphic techniques to describe the silkworm, which shows his love for nature.
7. The savage water beetle continued to tear at the small sheath fiercely until it knew that it had lost the food it wanted and was cheated away by the stone silkworm. Only then did he show a look of chagrin and frustration, and left the empty sheath with infinite nostalgia and helplessness to forage elsewhere. ?
Appreciation: The anthropomorphic rhetoric is used to describe the struggle between water beetles and silkworms, which shows the author's love for these small creatures.
8. We humans have submarines, and so do the silkworms. ?
Appreciation: Use analogy to illustrate the perfection of the scabbard of the stone silkworm, and at the same time give readers a very intuitive feeling.
9. Four years of hard work in the dark and enjoyment in the sunshine in January are the cicada's life. We shouldn't hate the noise and exaggeration in its songs.
Appreciation: The author uses contrastive rhetoric to highlight the difficulties of cicada life and express his love and admiration for cicada.
10, that kind of cymbal can be high enough to praise its happiness, so rare, but so short. ?
Appreciation: Using a metaphor, people lament the bravery and difficulty of cicadas.