think aloud
Soliloquy, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z ì y á NZ ì y ǔ, which refers to speaking to yourself. From the peach blossom girl by Wu Mingshi in Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth fold of the peach blossom girl written by Wu Mingshi in Yuan Dynasty: "you are so driven by ghosts. You are talking to yourself here. Don't you want to go out of the city and cut down the peach tree?"
Idiom usage
United; of speaking by oneself. Chapter 31 of Water Margin by Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty: the four men and women said to themselves: "look! The man was covered with blood, but where did he come from? Are you not a thief? " "Xingshihengyan · oil seller monopolizes Huakui": "(Qin Zhong) thinks again and says: '" If you have silver, I'm afraid he won't take it! But how much silver is there? " All the way, I thought and talked to myself. " Li Yu of the Qing Dynasty wrote "how can I get married?" "what do you say to yourself, son-in-law The first chapter of Li Baojia's Officialdom: at that time, after the noon card, the family set up a meal and told him not to eat. But he was alone, walking up and down in front of the study corridor with his hands on his back, talking to himself. Lu Xun's hesitation and blessing: "she often says to herself, 'what's the matter with her now? Zhao Shuli's sanliwan: "he slowly touched the chair he was sitting on and sat down. He was weak and said to himself," it's really troublesome! " Beethoven, the music giant: "what? What's the matter? " He said aloud. Next, I feel like I'm talking to myself: "bad luck, today! Oh, today I met those children who laughed at me, made fun of me and imitated me. "
Chinese PinYin : zì yán zì yǔ
think aloud
foresee the future by reivewing the past. jiàn wǎng zhī lái
lay more stress on the past than on the present. hòu gǔ bó jīn
The crow of the dog and the crow of the chicken. gǒu dào jī tí