Gē Xí Duàn Yì (Gē A piece of gold, Guan wields a hoe, is no different from the tiles and stones, Hua catches it and throws it away. We were also reading at the same table, and there was someone who passed by with a crown on his head. He would rather read as usual and waste the books to read. Ning cut the table and sat separately, saying: "You are not my friend."
Translation Guan Ning and Hua Xin were hoeing the ground in the vegetable garden together. When they saw a piece of gold in the ground, Guan Ning took it Treating it like bricks and tiles, he continued to hoe it and ignored it; Hua Xin picked it up and threw it out. The two of them were studying at the same table. When a dignitary passed by the door, Guan Ning continued to study and was not affected; Hua Xin put the book aside and went out to watch the fun. Guan Ning cut the mat in half, sat separately from Hua Xin, and said, "You are not my friend." It has become a synonym for breaking up the relationship. In fact, both of them were famous figures during the Three Kingdoms period, so it's hard to tell them apart.
Idiom Chinese people say they can be killed
Phonetic pronunciation guó rén jiē yuē kě shā
Words with the same rhyme and bad words added together will lead to defeat of the country and loss of family, and attracting thieves into the home. A generous house, talking about talents, crackling, on the verge of breaking out, seven steps and eight forks, wonderful pens producing flowers, dismounting and looking at the flowers [1]
Origin of the idiom
Both the left and right are said to be killable, Don't listen. People in the country say they can be killed, and then they look at them. If they see something that can be killed, they kill them. "Mencius: King Hui of Liang"
Interpretation
During the Warring States Period, Mencius and King Xuan of Qi discussed the issue of selecting talents. Mencius believed that the king should select talents regardless of their status or relationship. , the key is to value people's talents and talents. On the issue of removal and expulsion, the opinions of the people of the country should be consulted. If the people of the country think that he is indeed killable, they should kill him.
Today's usage
Later generations used the phrase "everyone in the country said he could be killed" to describe a person who had committed a heinous crime. People all over the country said he deserved to be killed.
Examples of idioms
Cha Wang Ni gathered gangsters, joined the enemy and rebelled against the country, made a treasonous secret agreement, and acted as an aide to the tiger, and everyone in the country said he could kill him.