1. The radical of "drum" is: drum
Pronunciation: gǔ?
Interpretation:
(1) A percussion instrument, cylindrical, hollow, with two skinned ends: drum music (yu?). Drum horn (ji僶 ). A large drum.?
(2) shaped, sounding, and acting like a drum: ear drum. Stone drums.
(3) to make a sound by striking or clapping: drum blow. Drumming.?
(4) To start, to energize: encourage. Drumming. Encourage. A drumming.?
(5) To raise, project: bulge. To bulge.
(6) In ancient times, drums were beaten at night to tell the time; a drum was a shift.?
Number of strokes: 13 ?
Group words: drums, drums cast, drums failing, drumming lips, drums and flags.
2, group word analysis:
Word: applaud ?
Pronunciation: gǔzhǎng
Definition:
(1) slap
(2) nowadays, more often than not, it means to express approval or joy
Example sentence: When I get the official position in the morning, you'll be called from the gungun yard with a clap of your hands, slapping your hands and calling me to my home.
Word: drum casting
Pronunciation: gǔzhǎng
Interpretation: drum wind and fan fire, smelting metal, casting coins or objects
Example sentence: i.e., Iron Mountain, drum casting, transportation strategy, pouring Dianshu's people, rich up to the boy thousand people.
Chinese idiom: 鼓衰力竭
拼音: gǔ shuāi lì jié
Explanation: 鼓: the sound of war drums;衰: weak. The sound of the war drums is weak, and their power has been exhausted. It describes the tragic situation when the war is close to defeat. It also describes the end of an article which is slack and weak.
Origin: Tang Li Hua, "Essay on Hanging Ancient Battlefields": "The drums are weakening and the strength is exhausted; the vectors are exhausted and the strings are dead."
Example sentence: In the ancient and modern poems of Fuangweng, there must be a meeting of interest and meaning at the end of each poem, and there is no such thing as the drums failing and the strings running out of strength.
Chinese idiom: 鼓唇弄舌
拼音: gǔ chún nòng shé
Explanation: 鼓:拨动,振动。 Vibrate the lips and fiddle with the tongue. Describes a person who provokes, incites or lobbies with his tongue.
Origin: Qing - Qian Yong "Cuiyuan Congquan - Old News - Xi's more virtuous": "......, and the Xu official yamen generation drum lips staggering tongue want to recklessly, and said that the thieves are not real, the device from the system also."
Example sentence: Now has been trapped in the funeral, still not ashamed, dare to drum lips and tongue in the crowd of vassals before Yes?
Chinese idiom: 鼓旗相当
拼音: gǔ qí xiāng dāng
Explanation: Two armies facing each other. The metaphor is that the two armies are not on a par with each other in terms of strength. It is the same as "flag and drum are equal".
Origin: Houhan Shu - Kui Xiang Biography: "If I make Ziyang go to Hanzhong and Sanfu, I would like to be equal to the general's troops and horses, and the drums and drums would be equal to each other."
Example sentence: The ability of class 1 and class 2 is really equal to the drum flag.