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What are the four-character idioms for "step"?

Trample on each other, pick up the green grass, trample on the rules, trample on the snow to find plum blossoms, trample on the sky and the ground, sheep trample on the vegetable garden, trample on iron shoes, stand still, fly on the snow, trample on the gang.

1. Trample on each other? [zì xiāng jiàn tà]?

Trampling on each other means that one’s own people trample on each other. Describe the embarrassment of everyone fleeing for their lives when the army is defeated

2. Picking up greenery and outing? [shí cuì tà qīng]?

Refers to spring outing. Volume 10 of "Hua Ji" by Deng Chun of the Song Dynasty: "Most of the paintings depict ladies riding in carriages, riding horses, and picking up greenery for an outing."

3. Violate the rules? [jiàn guī tà jǔ]?

Still following the rules. Zeng Guofan of the Qing Dynasty wrote in his "Preface to Sending Mr. Tang Back to the South": "If you look at the people who traveled with him, they followed the rules and obeyed the rules of the country."

4. Walking in the snow to look for plum blossoms? [tà xuě xún méi ]?

Volume 7 of Song Sun Guangxian's "Bei Meng Suoyan": "Maybe he said: 'Has Xiangguo (referring to Zheng Qi) any new poems recently?' He said: 'Poetry is in the wind and snow of Baqiao "On the donkey, how can I get it here?" Cheng Yu of the Ming Dynasty wrote "Poetry Skills·Poetry": "Meng Haoran's poems are on the back of the donkey in the wind and snow of Baqiao". "Xue Xunmei" describes the literati's sentiments of admiring the scenery and composing poems with painstaking efforts.

5. Pillars of heaven and earth? [zhù tiān tà dì]?

Refers to things that stand on top of the sky and the earth. Volume 130 of "Zhuzi Yulei" by Zhu Xi of the Song Dynasty: "If you fully understand this principle, you can become a human being, stand up in the sky and step on the earth, and live up to your life."

6. Sheep stepping on the vegetable garden?[ yáng tà cài yuán ]?

"Xiao Lin" written by Handan Chun of the Wei Dynasty in the Three Kingdoms: "Some people often eat vegetables and meat, but suddenly they eat mutton. They dreamed that the Five Tibetan Gods said: 'Sheep trampled through the vegetable garden!'" Later, it was used as a metaphor for eating habits. The vegetable doll eats meaty delicacies. "A Reply to Meng Hanmei in the Mountains" written by Han Tingxi of the Qing Dynasty: "The second brother has grown up in the mountains. Suddenly he sent some meat, and no sheep were left in the vegetable garden? But he didn't want his sister to be so affectionate, and to give her a full meal. Then get back together."

7. Break through the iron shoes? [tà pò tiě xié]?

It is a metaphor for going through difficulties and expending a lot of effort to find something. Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty's "Warning Words": "It's exactly this: you can't find anything even if you step through the iron shoes, and it takes no effort to get there!"

8. Stagnant? [ tà bù bù qián ]?

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Standing in place, not moving forward

9. Feihong treading on the snow? [ fēi hóng tà xuě ]?

Hong: wild goose. Snow trodden by wild geese. A metaphor for the traces left by the past. Same as "snow mud claw", "feihong seal snow", "feihong snow claw".

10. Bu Gang Tada Dou? [ bù gāng tà dǒu ]?

A Taoist priest worships the stars and summons the gods. Its walking turns are like stepping on the Gangxing constellation, hence its name. Gang, the handle of the Big Dipper. Dipper, Big Dipper.