Current location - Music Encyclopedia - Chinese History - What idioms are there from China's ancient fables? What idioms are there from historical stories? What idioms are there from fairy tales?
What idioms are there from China's ancient fables? What idioms are there from historical stories? What idioms are there from fairy tales?
Fools Move Mountains —— From Liezi Tang Wen

Gild the lily-from the Warring States policy

Stealing the Ear Clock —— From Lu Chunqiu Self-knowledge

It's never too late to mend —— From Liu Xiang's The Warring States Policy? 6? 1 Chu Ce IV "

Return pearls with courtesy-Han Feizi

Waiting for the Rabbit —— Talking from Everything is Wrong.

Cup bow and snake shadow-from "secular monsters" by ying Shao.

Irrelevant —— The Origin of Historical Records of Zhang Qian by Sima Qian in the Western Han Dynasty

Throw a brick to attract jade —— From the Legend of Jingdezhen Lantern by Songshi Daoyuan

Conspiracy and Trick —— From the fifteenth year of Zuo Zhuan

Teaching Axes to Teach People —— From Zongyuan's Preface to Wang Chorus Poems

A large sum of money-from Wang Jinshu Xun Zhuan.

Startle the snake —— From Song Zhengwenbao's Recent Situation of Southern Tang Dynasty

Small Skill of Carving Insects —— A Probe into the Origin of Li Chuan

A historical story from Mencius' Ugliness Theory: A fairy tale of three visits to the thatched cottage, taking an arrow to rest and taste the courage: Kuafu crossed the sea day by day, the Goddess Chang'e flying to the moon, Jingwei reclaimed the sea, the goddess filled the sky, opened the world, dried fish dazzled eyes, cowherd and weaver girl, moved mountains, learned to walk in Handan, made a scene in Heaven, and Hou Yi.