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Ready to explain

Stupid: The crawler looks like it is crawling. Metaphor: the enemy is preparing to attack or the bad guys are plotting to cause trouble.

The source of the idiom: "Yiyuan·Jurong Water Vein" by Liu Jingshu of the Southern Dynasties and Song Dynasty: "A black thing was dug up, without a head or tail, shaped like hundreds of dendrobium canals, tens of feet long, stupid and Move. ”

Idiom example: The enemy in the stronghold is ready to move again.

Traditional Chinese writing: ready to move

Phonetic: ㄔㄨㄣˇ ㄔㄨㄣˇ ㄧㄩˋ ㄉㄨㄙˋ

Synonyms of ready to move: eager to try He was in an anxious mood and eager to try. His words made Tang Er's heart itch and he was eager to give it a try. "The Appearance of Officialdom"

The antonym of being ready to move: stand still: the commander stops the army, takes no action for the time being, and waits for a fighter opportunity: it is a metaphor for accepting a task but not executing it temporarily to wait and see the development of the situation

Idiom grammar: more formal; used as predicate and object; has a derogatory meaning, describing being ready to do something at any time

Common usage: common idioms

Emotional and color: derogatory idiom

Idiom structure: Formal idiom

Era of production: Ancient idiom

English translation: ready to make trouble

Russian translation: закопошиться

Japanese translation: chance(きかい)をねらって动き出そうとしている

Other translations: lt; German gt; ans werk zu gehen versuchen lt; ein gewagtes spiel starten wollengt;

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Idiom riddle: Preparation order

Note on pronunciation: Stupid, cannot be pronounced as "chūn".

Note on writing: Stupid, you can’t write "春".

Afterword: The dormant worm returns its yang