The meaning of the word "outline" is to grasp the big rope to cast the net, and to lift the collar to take the clothes. The metaphor is to grasp the key outline.
Chinese pinyin: tí gāng qiè lǐng.
Chinese pinyin: tí gāng qiè lǐng.
Chinese pinyin: tí gāng qiè lǐng;
Chinese pinyin: tí gāng qiè lǐng. Lift up the rope of the fishing net and carry the collar of the clothes. It is a metaphor for grasping the key of a matter or revealing a problem in a concise manner.
Chinese idiom: "Xunzi - Counseling Learning": If you take the fur collar and stutter your fingers, you can't count the number of people who are obedient. Later, the idiom of "to bring up the outline and the collar" was derived from this allusion.
Idiomatic usage: joint structure with positive meaning; generally used as predicate, gerund and complement in a sentence.
Example of idiom: Liang Yu-chun, "On the Fellows of the Intellectual Traffic House": "It turns out that they have organized a four-fold system for any discipline of intellect, and all day long they are there to speak out many systems, large and small, by chapters and sections and by outlining the main points of the system."
The outline of the report of the General Assembly
1. At the group meeting, the leader of the group communicated the contents of the report of the General Assembly in an outline.
2. At the beginning of the meeting, he began by outlining the data of the meeting.
3. To finish a thick book in a short time, outlining the reading is a must.
4, when teaching, if the content can be explained in an outline, students are more likely to grasp the key points.
5. Before climbing, the leader again outlines the precautions to be taken.
6. He organized the content of the textbook into an outline of the data, so that it is easy to review later.
7, We outlined our proposal to the committee.
8. The director outlined the program.
9, Jaspers' Great Philosophers is an attempt to outline this idea.