Before and after
Before and after, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi á nm ù h ò UF á n, which means a stroke of the spring and Autumn Annals. A thing is repeated in the text. The former is explained in detail, while the latter is briefly described. It comes from the biography of Gongyang, the fifth year of Yugong.
Analysis of Idioms
The origin of synonyms
The origin of Idioms
In the fifth year of the Duke of Fu in the biography of Gongyang: "in autumn and August, the princes would like to wear it first. Why are the princes out of order? If you see me again, I'll look ahead and see you later. "
Idiom usage
It can be used as an object or attribute in writing.
Before and after
My feet are full and my tongue is full - zú jiǎn shé bì
glare like a temple door god -- to be fierce of visage - jīn gāng nù mù
Happiness lies in misfortune, and misfortune lies in happiness - fú xī huò suǒ fú,huò xī fú suǒ yī