rhetorical
In the single edition of jiaopaji · xunchun in Ming Dynasty, it is said that "when we learn from the rich, we can only take seven steps; when we stop boasting about embroidering tigers and Carving Dragons, it's time to break the country."
definition
Name: Embroidered tiger and carved dragon
Pinyin: Xi ù h ǔ di ā ol ó ng
Explanation: the rhetoric of the metaphor article is gorgeous.
explain
Embroidered Tiger: 1. The fourth volume of Lei Shuo quoted the miscellaneous notes of jade box: "Cao Zhi is named embroidered tiger in seven steps. "Embroidery is the beauty of his Ci, while tiger is the talent of him. Later, he was known as "Xiuhu" who was good at poetry and rhetoric.
Dragon carving: 1. The rhetoric is broad and magnificent.
words whose meaning is similar
write in an ornate style
antonym
rack one's brains
Idiom information
Idiom explanation: it refers to the rhetoric of an article.
Idiom example: This article embroiders the tiger, carves the dragon, reads lets the human aftertaste infinite.
Degree of common use: Average
Emotional color: commendatory words
Grammatical usage: with commendatory meaning. Generally used as attribute, predicate and object.
Idiom structure: United
Time of emergence: Modern Times
Idioms: tiger, can not be read as "H à"; carving, can not be read as "Di à o".
Idioms distinguish form: embroider, can't write "Xiu"; dragon, can't write "you".
Chinese PinYin : xiù hǔ diāo lóng
rhetorical