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  A collection of idioms about rabbits

  As the name suggests, idioms about rabbits should naturally appear in the text "rabbit". Generally speaking, this is the case, but there are exceptions. For example, "Complex and Confusing", this idiom comes from the Northern Dynasties folk song "Mulan Ci": "The male rabbit's feet are complicated, the female rabbit's eyes are blurred, and the two rabbits walk next to each other, An Neng can distinguish me as a male and female." : The state of being invisible. Later generations used this term as a metaphor for the intricacies of things, and it was difficult to distinguish them for a while.

  ▲The Three Caves of the Cunning Rabbit

  This idiom comes from the "Warring States Policy•The Fourth Policy of Qi". Feng Chen, the doorman of Yuchijun, once said to Yuchangjun: "The cunning rabbit has three caves, so you can only avoid its dead ears. Now you have a cave, and you don't have to sleep on your back. Please. The second cave was restored for the emperor." Under Feng Chen's planning, the status of Yuchangjun was unbreakable in the Wei state. Later generations used this idiom as a metaphor for hiding places or being good at avoiding disasters, but they are mostly used in derogatory sense.

  ▲See the rabbit and the dog

  This idiom comes from the "Warring States Policy•Chu Policy Four", Zhuang Xin said to King Chu Xiang: "It is not too late to see a rabbit and care about a dog; it is not too late to make up for the loss of a sheep." There is still time to think of a way. It has the same meaning as the term "remedy", but there are minor differences. The latter focuses on remedial measures after things happen, and when used, there are differences between the two.

  ▲ Dogs and rabbits are dead

  This idiom comes from the "Warring States Policy•The Third Policy of Qi", when Qi State wanted to attack the Wei Dynasty, Chun Yufang told the story that the dog Han Zilu chased the cunning rabbit Dong Guo Fu and was defeated by Tian Fu and prevented Qi from sending troops. . This story is quite similar to the fable of "the snipe and the clam fight, the fisherman gains", but later generations often use it as a metaphor of two defeats.

  ▲The rabbit goes back to the cave, the fox's death head mound

  This idiom comes from "Huainanzi • Shuo Lin Xun": "The bird flies against the hometown, the rabbit goes back to the cave, the fox dies on the mound, and the cold will fly to the water, each mourning for his birth." Later generations often used to describe the hometown or the motherland. Nostalgia.

  ▲ Rabbit shredded oats

  This idiom comes from "The Biography of Wei Shu•Li Chong": "Although the son of a country has the name of an academic, but there is no such thing as a professor, he is different from the rabbit silk oatmeal, and the Nanji Beidouzai!" Rabbit silk has the name of silk and cannot be woven. Oats have the name of wheat and cannot be eaten.

  ▲Sorrow of rabbit and fox

  This is a commonly used idiom, the next sentence is "things hurt its kind", the meaning is self-evident. Idioms from "Song History•Li Quan

  "Biography" changed: "The fox dies and the rabbit is crying, Li is dead, and Xia's Ning is alone? May the general look forward to it." This idiom is generally derogatory, but it can also be used in self-ridicule situations, "The tragedy of the fox and rabbit." "Is its variant.

  ▲The rabbit walks and flies

  This idiom is a metaphor for the movement of the sun and the moon, and the passage of time. It comes from Tang Zhuang Nanjie's "Song of Hurting": "The rabbits go and fly without seeing each other, and the personnel are vaguely as fast as electricity."

  ▲Take the rabbit to forget the hoof

  This idiom has the same meaning as "get the fish and forget the 筌". It is a metaphor for forgetting the power or condition by which it depends after success. It comes from "Zhuangzi • Outer Objects": "The hooves are so fish, get the fish and forget the hooves; the hooves are therefore the rabbits, get the rabbits but forget the hooves." The hooves: bamboo utensils for fishing; hooves: nets for catching rabbits .

  In addition, such as "rabbit sunflower oatmeal" to describe a desolate scene, "rabbit horns and cow wings" can also be used as idioms for unreasonable things. As for the common sayings of "a rabbit's tail can't grow" and "a rabbit doesn't eat grass on the edge of its nest", they are the language of life that people often say, so I won't repeat them here.