The hiatus is a special form of Chinese language. It is a special form of language created by the masses in the practice of life, and it is a kind of short, funny and figurative statement. The hiatus is composed of two parts: the first part of the "introduction" role, like a riddle, and the second part of the "back lining" role, like the bottom of the riddle, very natural and apt. The following is the classic proverbial hiatus I brought, I hope it will help you.
Classic proverbial epigrams 1To beat the snow in a waxing moon. --rare
Mulberry leaves in October. --No one pays attention to; no one picks; who pays attention to you; who picks you; no one picks; no one pays attention to
No piggybacking on crackers in May and Yellow June.
Raise a glass to the moon. --- Playing with the kettle
In June, pulling the mother-in-law to sunbathe. --False attentiveness
The snow in Lunar New Year. -- spread out
The sickle in Lunar New Year. -- hanging idle
Cotton shoes in the month. -- good hot feet; good day feet; good day
Amaranth in May. -- being in the red
A torch in the moonland. -- redundant
Raising hooligans on July 7th. --Coincidentally
June widow's lettuce falsely has a heart. --False feelings
The mother of the caller sits in the moonlight. --not opening its mouth
Fishing for red fish in the tenth winter month. --The hour is not up; not up to the hour; the hour is not up
June big dish. --False intention
A ladder on a tree to pick the moon.
Lunar New Year's dry eating area peas.
The first time I've seen it, it was the first time I've seen it
In June, I put up a doorstop.
The first time I saw it, it was the first time I saw it. -- cool inside and out
Wear a leather jacket in June. -- not good people; Wuhan; cover sweat
Olive wood moon bone cushion feet. -- half a month late; out of date; out of fashion; out of date; out of time; half a month late; half a month late
Ten winter months wearing a fur coat. --just in time; just right
To put on a door god in the first half of the first month. --One to the east, one to the west
The red potatoes in March. -- sick
December sell couplets. --various
Selling fire pots in June. --hot people
Pancakes in February. --stalled; paralyzed
Eating mooncakes on July 15th. --Catch first; catch fresh; catch fresh children; catch first children
Fishing for the moon in a well. -- in vain
The moon is full of flowers. - - empty good looking; empty hanging name; empty hanging bright; empty good; empty good looking
Drinking cold water in the waxing moon. -- Dot into the heart
Mulberry leaves between December. --Who pays attention to you; who picks you
Sleeve the horse pole to explore the moon. -- Delusional; delusional
June day overnight buns. -- Outside the light inside stinks
Moon mother child farting. -- not fetal gas; a bellyful of fetal gas
Chang'e runs to the moon. --At one time; beautiful to the sky
The head of the baby in the moon. --not through a pack
March peach buds. --one day at a time
Swallows build their nests. -- day by day
The days of the Mountain of Flowers and Fruits. -- Monkey year and monkey month
Cockatrice in October. --Red in old age
Borrowing a grate pan in the month of Lunar New Year. --Tight goods
The field hen on March 3rd. --when duh don't duh; when say don't say; when toot don't toot
Wearing silk clothes in December. --Which is no wonder he has; people have to wear
Classical proverbial epigrams 2
1. Chickens don't eat food without work : It is a metaphor that people can't accept preferential treatment or gifts for no reason.
2. Regardless of talking about chickens and ducks, I only talk about geese: no matter what others say, I only talk nonsense
3. The house chickens beat round and round, and the pheasants beat and stick to the sky: the metaphor is that the closest relatives, though aggrieved and blamed, still refuse to go away.
4. Three more lights and five more chickens: a metaphor for diligence and hard work, going to bed late and getting up early
5. Wind and rain are as bad as the sun, and the rooster crows: a metaphor for the people's urgent need for the leadership of a bright ruler in a chaotic world.
6. Before the evening, you should sleep in, and the cock crows to see the sky
7. Stealing a chicken does not work
8.
14.
15. The sound of a chicken and a dog is heard, and the old man dies.
16. It is better to be the mouth of a chicken than the back of a cow.
17. Eggs on bones
18. Hands off.
The classic proverbial hiatus 3
1. The tiger drilled into the iron cage, can not play the wind;
2. The mountain to help the tiger, the tiger to increase the power of the mountain;
3. The tiger ate the lamb, and even the bones are not spit;
4. A mountain is all tigers, and no one can be the king;
5. The tiger fierce and difficult to harm the prudent horse
6. There is no tiger in the mountain, the monkey called
7. Ants eat ants, magpies chase tigers;
8. Tigers don't dare to eat herds of cows;
9. Lions fight with lions, tigers laugh;
10. Tigers on the paintings: they can't eat people
11. Climbers on the wall: they dare to climb to the peaks
12. Taking the tiger's tail to cry for help, the tiger's tail is a symbol for a person who wants to be killed: The tiger does not eat people: it is notorious (metaphorically speaking, it is difficult to recover from a bad reputation)
14. The tiger does not mind the thinness of the yellow goat: it is fine if it dabbles in meat
15. The tiger eats meat: it comes down from the mountain in person (metaphorically speaking, it is personally present to take up the air)
16. The tiger meets the leopard in the mountain: one is more evil than the other
17. The tiger visits the door: it is a rare guest
19. The tiger meets the panther: it is more evil than the other
20. The tiger yawns: a rare guest
18. The tiger yawns: a big mouth
19. The tiger fights: can't be persuaded
20. The tiger dozes off: a rare opportunity
21. The tiger wears a cap of the earth: pretends to be a Buddhist monk
22. The son of the tiger: don't look at him or her as a small man
23. The tiger's tail: can't be touched. (The tiger's tail: you can't touch it
24. The tiger's circle: one time is enough
25. The tiger's herd: it's a sure thing
26. The tiger's stroll in the park: who dares to stop it
27. The tiger's birth to a pig: it's evil and stupid
28. The tiger's beard: who dares to mold it
29. The tiger's entry into the city: all the houses are closed
30. The tiger's entry into the coffin tree: the tiger's beard: who dares to close the doors
31. p> 30. tiger in the coffin tree: scared to death
31. tiger looking at the child: the meat of the Lord
32. tiger pulling a cart: to listen to that set of things (metaphorically speaking, no matter what other people say, how to do, ignore)
33. tiger grinning: evil intentions
34. tiger wearing a straw raincoat: after all, it is not a human being
35. tiger wearing a straw raincoat: it is not a human being
36. tiger wearing a straw raincoat: it is not a human being
37. tiger wearing a straw raincoat: it is not a human being
38. The tiger in a straw raincoat: not a human being after all
36. The tiger's skin, the rabbit's guts: the color of the tiger
37. The tiger owes a debt: it can't be recovered
38. The lice on the tiger: who dares to mess with it (a metaphor for the minions and the lapdogs bullying the people and no one dares to ask)
39. The fly on the tiger's head: it can't be swatted
40. Eight tigers breaking into Youzhou: the dead die, the lost lose (a metaphor for too much loss)
41. (a metaphor for too much loss)
41. Holding the tiger and calling for help: seeking death
42. Feeding the tiger under the quilt: harming others and oneself
43. Geckos catching worms: not moving
44. Geckos catching food: taking them by surprise
45. Geckos lifting the door curtains: revealing a small hand
46. A small hand
47. Pulling the tiger's tail: a show of strength
48. Pulling the tiger's tail and shouting for help: looking for death
49. Drawing a tiger on the window: scaring no one
50. Sneezing and scaring the tiger to death: a coincidence
51. Drawing a tiger on the thigh: not scaring no one
52. A tiger with a bead of veggies: a fake recitation of the Mithras (a metaphor for pretending to have a good heart)
52.
53. A tiger with cubs: extraordinarily fierce
54. A local snake, a tigress: not to be trifled with
55. A donkey in the east mountain, a tiger in the west mountain: a bit of a show
56. A tiger dodged a tiger, but then a bison ran into it: each one is more ferocious than the other (a metaphor for a disaster that is more serious than the other)
57. A hungry tiger
58. Letting the tiger return to the mountain: leaving behind the root of the trouble (a metaphor for leaving behind the trouble)
59. Monkey riding the tiger: coming down
60. Catching lice on the head of the tiger: looking for death (a metaphor for asking for misfortune)
61. Pulling out the hair on the tiger's mouth: a great courage (a metaphor for a great boldness)
62. Painting a tiger: who is afraid of your ferociousness
63.
63. A tiger's poison does not hurt the child;
64. A tiger eats the end of a fly, but there is no place to eat;
65. A phoenix is not as good as a chicken, and a tiger is deceived by a dog;
66. If you don't go into a tiger's den, it is difficult to get a tiger;
67. A tiger's tail can't be touched;
68. The first-born calf is not afraid of a tiger;
69.
70. A dragon swimming in shallow water is teased by shrimps, a tiger falling in the sun is bullied by dogs
71. If you dare to pull down the emperor, the tiger will have to be broken
72. A tiger farting: no one dares to smell it
73. A tiger entering a village: no one dares to pay attention to it
74. A tiger falling on its face: the tiger has a hard back
75. A tiger wearing a bridle: no one dares to go to the village
76. A tiger wearing a horse: no one dares to go to the village
77. A tiger wearing a horse: no one dares to go there.
76. The whiskers around the tiger's mouth: who dares to touch them
77. The tiger comes down from the mountain: fierce
78. The tiger goes up to the mountain: who dares to stop it
79. The tiger twists its tail: to give off its power
Classical Proverbial Heterodoxies 4
1. Sunset is in the clouds, and the rain falls in the middle of the night.
2. Half a rainbow comes out of the sky, and rain rings on that day.
3, proverbs from daily life (Netherlands)
4, a row of fence three piles, a good man three help.
5, the sun dizziness rain, the moon dizziness scrape the sky dusk.
6, the spring water is the most clear, the most refined proverbs
7, if you do not lose sleep, porridge with white lotus;
8, people in the bitter refining, knife grinding on the stone.
9, slang is a long-flowing river of poetry (Chesterton)
10, an egg can not eat enough, a reputation back to the old.
11, a bite can not eat a cake, a spade can not dig a well.
12, there is no proverb that is not true (Cervantes)
13, an art is not a world of poverty.
14, almost every proverb has an opposite meaning to it, and equally witty proverbs and its opposite (Santayana)
15, rapid thunderstorms are easy to stop, muffled thunder days are difficult to open.
16, fog and dew through the hollow, good not to ring (referring to low clouds through the hollow).
17, people to forty-five, or out of the mountain tiger.
18, all slang is a metaphor is poetry (Chesterton)
19, the treasure knife does not sharpen unfavorable, speak no proverbs powerless
20, three big laughs a day, there are sick will also be good.
21, proverbs can reflect a nation's creativity, wisdom and spirit (Bacon)
22, three good with a good, three bad with a bad.
23, a day to dance a few dances, live to ninety-five.
24, east rainbow fog dew (rainbow in the east), west rainbow rain (rainbow in the west).
25, the knife does not grind to rust, water does not flow to stink.
26, Proverbs are the wonderful words of one man, the wisdom of all men (Jo Russell)
27, The vast majority of those who spread proverbs like the beauty of their ideas more than their righteousness, and like the character of their wording more than their true meaning (Chesterfield)
28, The wind of the Southern Urn, and the rain of the Northern Urn, and the weather of both Urns (referring to the Sun Urn).
29, a piece of mill on the spot "forging" (broken).
30, proverbs are the crystallization of wisdom
31, the south wind and rain, the south wind to open, but three days back (the same as the east wind).
32, the proverbs created by a nation mark the state of mind and degree of civilization of the nation (Joe Holland)
33, the eggplant does not open false flowers, the proverbs are all the truth
34, some words and proverbs can alleviate the pain or eliminate the torment of the disease (Horace)
35, a meal to eat injuries, ten to eat soup.
36, a long sunny day will have a long streak of cloudiness.
37, a short proverb often contains a wealth of wisdom (Sophocles)
38, people yellow with disease, the sky yellow with rain.
39, a stinging catch (insect name) harm a wok of soup.
40, cloud cross cloud, rain (refers to the upper and lower clouds towards different rain).
41, proverbs are the flowers of language
42, the morning sun does not go out, the evening sun travels a thousand miles.
43, a thousand silver sitting and eating two and a half years, sitting and eating the sea also dry.
44, the words of the proverb are few, but the meaning is far-reaching (Loran)
45, garlic is a treasure, often eat good health.
46, empty words floating around with the wind, proverbs into the heart to remember
47, small water is not prevented, the water is difficult to block.
48, only after the verification of life, proverbs become proverbs for you (Keats)
49, proverbs are those that people summarize on the basis of long-term practice of the refined ` language (Cervantes)
50, Thunderbird sings first without rain, and there is not much rain.
51, good day red sun, windy purple sun, rain sun white and yellow (referring to the sunset).
52, force is a living treasure, with off again, three days early when a work, three dusk against half work.
53, the sunlight illuminates the world, proverbs reveal life
54, smoking in the morning, early return to heaven;
55, buds are conceived in the branches and leaves, proverbs are in the life of the refinement
56, the water drop accumulates more than a basin, proverbs accumulates more than a learning experience.
57, drought scrape the east wind does not rain, flood scrape the east wind does not open the sky.
58, proverbs are the salt of the language (Arab)
59, the north wind out of the high clouds, the wind stops quickly; the south wind out of the low clouds, the wind stops quickly.
60, Proverbs are the wisdom of the street (Benham)
61, Proverbs are the essence of the national conscience (Mackintosh)
62, The head of the north wind, the tail of the south wind (the north wind starts out big, the south wind gets bigger and bigger).
Classic proverbial epigrams 5Watching dragon lanterns on August 15 - late for half a year
Setting up the Dragon Gate and holding dolls - two without delay
Long worms seize the dragon pearl - -a whimsical idea
Zhao Zi Long in Chang Ban Po - a single gunman
An opera singer wearing a dragon's robe - can't be an emperor
Out of the Dragon Pool and into the Tiger's Lair Can a one-eyed dragon read a book - a sideways glance
Can a one-eyed dragon go on a blind date - a glance
Can a big dragon not eat a small dried fish - not see eye to eye
dry Carp jumps the Dragon Gate - a great panic
The State Uncle sits in the Dragon Court - a fragrant wind to the sky
The Sea Dragon King is looking for a son-in-law - in the soup, in the water
The Sea Dragon King is looking for a son-in-law - in the soup, in the water
The King of the Sea Dragon yawns - what a big mouth
The King of the Sea Dragon's minions - shrimp soldiers and crab generals
The King of the Sea Dragon eats crabs - knocking the bones and sucking the marrow
Dragon boat rowing in the river - working together
Flooding the Dragon King's temple - not knowing one's own family
The Dragon King's minions - shrimp soldiers and crab generals
The Dragon King eating crabs - knocking out the bones and sucking out the marrow
It's hard to draw a dragon and a tiger - you don't know what you're talking about
The painter's son - he can draw a dragon and a tiger
The fire god and the dragon king - they're just not the same.
The dragon's revolt - turning the river upside down
The dragon's fall into the water - making clouds and rain
The dragon's fall into the water - making clouds and waves
The dragon is trapped on the beach - its might is lost
The dragon's head is tickled - its whiskers are not alive
The Nine Dragons rule the water - there is no rain.
Peking Opera Dragon Set - Going through the motions
Kong Ming plus Zi Long - Wisdom and Courage
Carp jumps over the Dragon Door - A life of nine deaths
Carp jumps over the Dragon Door.
Carp Fish Jump Dragon Door - Take Your Chance
Carp Fish Jump Dragon Door - Double Your Value
Carp Fish Jump Dragon Door - Turn Your Life Around
Carp Fish Jump Dragon Door - Turn Your Life Around
Carp Fish Jump Dragon Door - Turn Your Life Around
Carp fish jumps over the Dragon Gate--has been promoted
The dragon that has left the Crystal Palace--has no way to move forward. - is not good
The Dragon King on the Rotten Board Bridge - is not good
Two men dancing the dragon - has a head and a tail
The descendants of the Dragon King - -dragon sons and dragon grandsons
The Dragon King's son - can teal water
The Dragon King's mouth - a sea mouth
The Dragon King does - -call the wind and rain
The Dragon King's crossword - wind and rain
The Dragon King's palace - cold
The Dragon King yawns - -No need for your old (fishing)
The Dragon King fell in the sea - went back home
The Dragon King recruits a son-in-law - came in the soup, went in the water
The Dragon King sells sauerkraut --Poor God
The Dragon King goes out to sea -- Making waves
The Dragon King goes out to sea -- Holding on to the sea
The Dragon King goes out to sea --Don't ask you to lao (fish)
The Dragon King's helpers--Shrimp soldiers and crab generals
The Dragon King loses his temper--Don't be (turtle) hasty