Pinyin

Pinyin: zhé jǐ.

Folding the halberd is a Chinese word with the pinyin zhé jǐ, which describes a heavy failure. It comes from the poem "Red Cliff" by Du Mu of the Tang Dynasty: "The iron has not yet been broken by the folding of the halberd and sinking of the sands, and I have recognized the previous dynasty by my own scrubbing. The east wind is not with Zhou Lang, and the bronze sparrow locks up the two Qiao in spring." Folding (pinyin: zhé, shé, zhē) This character was first written in the oracle-bone inscriptions of the Shang Dynasty, and its ancient form resembled the cutting of a tree with an axe catty, and its original meaning was to break.

Separated from break, it is used in an abstract sense, and by extension refers to the judgment of a case, and by extension to defeat. Fracture implies destruction, and therefore by extension loss, and further by extension death, specifically premature death. Folding is also derived from bending, and from bending is derived from bending. It is also derived from turning. The object is folded into a paragraph, from which it is derived as a paragraph in the structure of a miscellaneous drama script.

The Chinese character for "halberd" (戟), which is read as "halberd" (jǐ) in the second level of the Chinese language, is used interchangeably. From Ge, from 榦(gàn)省. The original meaning refers to ancient weapons. Made of bronze, it synthesizes spear and go into one piece, capable of both straight thrusts and horizontal strikes. Definition: an ancient long-handled weapon that combined a go and a spear into one: a hooked halberd. Halberd fingers. Iron halberd. Bronze halberd.

Huiyi. From go, from 榦 (gàn) province. Original meaning: ancient weapon. Made of bronze, the spear and go are combined into one, which can both stab straight and strike horizontally. A kind of weapon that can be hooked or stabbed, appeared in the Shang and Zhou, and flourished in the Warring States, Han and Jin dynasties. The halberd is a branching weapon.

Benefits of Learning Words

It contains the beauty of language, traditional wisdom, historical allusions, and after thousands of years of precipitation, it has very high wisdom and connotation. It is a few numbers, but the meaning is infinite. A child who masters idioms can speak in perfect phrases and write like a god. It is the essence of traditional Chinese culture, which not only improves the children's language expression ability, but also serves as a kind of character education, which is very beneficial to the children's growth.

Language tests a child's ability to master the written word, and composition is the test of this ability. How to improve children's literary literacy and enhance their writing ability has always been the focus of language teaching. And when children are skillful in idioms, they can apply them to their compositions, which is helpful in improving their language performance.