deduce by analogy
The idiom, used as predicate, object and attribute, refers to being good at reasoning and being able to go from here to there. From the Analects of Confucius, Shuer: "if you take one corner and don't take three instead, you won't get any more." He is good at reasoning and can go from here to there.
Idiom explanation
Explanation: refers to good at reasoning, can from one to another.
The origin of Idioms
In the Analects of Confucius, it is said that "if you take one corner and don't take three instead, you won't get any more."
Examples of Idioms
Chapter 14 of Tenggu Guxiang's thunder in the sky in the Qing Dynasty: "the private is the analysis of the public, and the public is the accumulation of the private. If you want it, you can fight suoxidi."
Discrimination of words
Draw inferences from one instance
Idiom usage
Used as predicate, object, attribute; used in dealing with affairs
Synonyms: drawing inferences from one instance
Chinese PinYin : yī jǔ sān fǎn
deduce by analogy
talent unsurpassed in one 's generation. gài shì zhī cái
deal with a host of problems every day. rì yǒu wàn jī
plan very carefully with every conceivable possibility taken into account. suàn wú yí cè