Button plate
The metaphor of K ò up á nm é NYU è is one-sided and not to the point
Button plate
The metaphor of K ò up á nm é NYU è is one-sided and has not got the main point. It is the same as "holding the tray and holding the candle". Su Shi, Song Dynasty, wrote in his "the metaphor of the sun" that "those who are born in the sun do not know the sun, and those who ask have a purpose. Or tell them: "the shape of the sun is like a bronze plate." The sound comes from the buckle. When I hear the clock, I think it's the same day. Or tell them: "the light of the sun is like a candle." Touch the candle to get its shape. "
Source of allusion
Su Shi, Song Dynasty, wrote in his "the metaphor of the sun" that "those who are born in the sun do not know the sun, and those who ask have a purpose. Or tell them: "the shape of the sun is like a bronze plate." The sound comes from the buckle. When I hear the clock, I think it's the same day. Or tell them: "the light of the sun is like a candle." Touch the candle to get its shape. "
words whose meaning is similar
Hold the candle
Idiom information
Idiom explanation: one sided understanding of metaphor, not to the point. It is the same as "holding the tray and holding the candle". Examples of idioms: Yu Pingbo's the mystery of Poetry: "it's all the talk of touching the plate and the skill of bluffing." Grammatical usage: used as predicate and attributive; one sided understanding of metaphor without getting the main point; idiom structure: combined
Idiom story
In ancient times, a born blind man asked people what the sun was like. They said that the sun was like a copper plate. When the blind man came home and found that the copper plate could ring, he mistook the sound of the bell for the sun. They told him that the sun was silent and had heat like a candle. He went home and took the candle as the sun. One day, he found that the instrument was very similar to a candle, and he thought it was the sun.
Chinese PinYin : kòu pán mén yuè
Button plate
happy ending without happy beginning. yù yáng xiān yì
the nine schools of thought and three religions. sān jiào jiǔ liú
refuse to accept an honourable station and occupy a humble one. cí zūn jū bēi
untrammeled by worldy affairs. xiāo rán wù wài
the willow brings the message of spring. lòu xiè chūn guāng
ruthless and devoid of human feelings. rěn xīn hài lǐ