sound of reading aloud
The sound of reading is a Chinese idiom. Its pronunciation is sh ū sh ē NGL á NGL á ng, which means to describe the sound of reading. It comes from shangmeiyang.
The origin of Idioms
In Song Dynasty, Li Zhaofan's shangmeiyang, it is said that "every person who has passed each other talks about his morality and righteousness, recites his articles, and there is a lot in the hall all day long."
Idiom usage
After class, in the hot and dry air, the campus is full of books, and there is a strong smell of books everywhere. After class, not many people will sit quietly in the classroom. The playground is full of people running games, cheering, playing sound condensed into a, students sweating. 2. Turn around the mountain and see a beautiful house. There are lots of books in it. Oh, it's a school. 3. The bell rings and there are lots of books in the classroom. 4. Bid farewell to the shady campus, set sail, and start the chapter of struggle; bid farewell to the sound of books, lofty sentiments, and pursue the dream in the heart; bid farewell to the former classmates, long friendship, and sincere wishes. On the occasion of graduation, I wish you with vision, towards the direction of success! 5. The sound of reading in the morning and the beautiful writing is the little star of June 1; the songs are sung every day and the dance is practiced every day, which is the wonderful performance of June 1; the happy festival is the most beautiful expectation. The dream in my heart is right in front of me. Happy June 1!
Discrimination of words
Attention: the usage of "shushenglang" is misinformation. No matter in Cihai or the sixth edition of modern Chinese dictionary, there is only "shushenglang" but not "shushenglang". In the high school entrance examination and the college entrance examination, it is found that "book sound" is a wrong usage.
sound of reading aloud
to manufacture a perfect cart begins from the simple spokeless wheel - dà lù zhuī lún
have talent but no opportunity to use it - wén zhāng zèng mìng
our fox-furs are frayed and worn - hú qiú méng róng
insist on doing evil without repentance - wéi è bù quān
traces left by chariot and horse - chē zhén mǎ jì