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英语谚语 附上其来历 英语介绍

作者:优美散文网
日期:2021-04-04 22:17:46
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英语的起源

一 英语的“家谱”
英语是印欧 (1ndo-European)语系。印欧语系是世界上最大的语系,包括欧洲、美洲和亚洲的大部分语言。讲印欧诸种语言的总人数约有十八亿七千五百万,占世界总人口的一半左右。早在1786年,英国梵文(Sanskrit)学者威廉·琼斯爵士 (Sir William Jones) 就指出:欧洲、印度、波斯等地的大多数语言,包括古希腊语、古拉丁语及古印度语属于同一“家族”。

原始印欧人是什么样的人? 他们居住在何方? 他们的语言究竞是什么样子的? 对这些问题,我们今天仍缺乏文献的考证。但是通过长时期的研究,语言学家们得出了探索性的结论他们发现:属于印欧语系的许多语种都有表示“冬天”、“雪”和“寒冷”等意义的词,这说明原始印欧语最初是在气候比较冷的地一带使用的。另一方面,某些热带地区动植物名称的词,如“狮子”、“大象”、“稻米”、“竹”、“棕榈树”等,在原始印欧语中是不存在的;而印欧语系各语种中却都有表示“白杨”、“栎树”、“柳树”、“白桦”、“熊”、“狼”、“羊”、“鹰”、“蜜蜂”等动植物名称的相似词。通过这样的探索和研究,许多人认为,当人类进入新石器时代,欧洲中东部曾居隹着一些游牧部落,他们饲养着象羊、狗、奶牛和马这样的家畜,会使用马和简陋的马车,并能够驰骋于一望无际的原野上。这些游牧部落就是原始印欧人,他们用于交际的语言就是原始印欧语。大约在公元前3500年至公元前2500年间,这些原始印欧人开始迁徒。有些向西移动,有些向东移动,而有些则向南移动,到达今天的南亚次大陆。这些部落的大迁徒导致印欧语系的逐步形成。古印度语与古代欧洲语言之所以非常相近,其历史根源即在于此。

印欧语系包括:(一)印度语族(Indic);(二).伊朗语族(Iranian);(三)斯拉夫语族(Slavic),(四)波罗的话族(Baltic),(五)日耳曼语族(Germanic),(六)拉丁语族(亦称罗曼语族[Romance]), (七)凯尔特语族(Celtic),(八)希腊语族;(九)阿尔巴尼亚语(Albanian),(十)亚美尼亚语族(Armenian), (十一)吐火罗语族(Tocharian;Tokharian)(十二)赫梯语族(Hittite)。日耳曼语族是一个比较大的语族。它又分为三个语支:(一)东日耳曼语支(EastGermanic)主要以现已绝迹的哥特语(Gothic)为代表;(二)北日耳曼语支(North Germanic),主要以古北欧语(Oid Norse)为代表,包括今日的挪威语(Norwegian)、冰岛语(Icelandic)、瑞典语和丹麦语等;(三)西日耳曼语支(West Germanic)包括低地德语(Low German) 今日的荷兰语(Dutch)、高地德语(High German)、英语、弗里西亚语(Frisian)佛兰芒语(Flemish)等。因此,我们说:英语属于印欧语系的日耳曼语族的西日耳曼语支。

二 英语的形成

英国南面隔英吉利海峡(the English Channel)、多佛尔海峡(the Straits of Dover)与法国相望,东面和东南面隔北海(the North Sea)与荷兰、比利时、丹麦、挪威遥对。距 欧洲大陆最窄处的多佛尔海峡仅三十公里宽。英国的领土主要包括大不列颠岛和爱尔兰岛东北部。大不列颠岛包括三个地区:英格兰占南部和中部,威尔士占西部山地半岛,苏格兰占北部;其中以英格兰最为重要。大不列颠岛是欧洲第一大岛,海岸非常曲折,长达一万一千四百五十公里。英语就是在这样的地理环境中形成的。为了说明英语的起源,我们有必要回顾一下英语形之前的英国史前史。文物考查已经证明,古代印欧游牧部落西移之前今天的不列颠诸岛上已居住着旧石器人(Paleolithic Man)。那时,不列颠诸岛和欧洲大陆是连成一片的,英国和法国之间还没有今天的英吉利海峡和多佛尔海峡,莱茵河(the Rhine)与泰晤士河(the Thames)之间尚由其支流相接、今天的英国仍属欧洲大陆的一部分。大约在距今九千年的时候;由于地壳的变迁,大不列颠诸岛从欧洲大陆分离出来。所以史前的旧石器人能够在不列颠定居下来并不足为怪。曾任过英国首相的温斯顿·邱召尔Sir Winston Churchill)(1874?/FONT>1965)在其《说英语的民族史》(History of the English Speaking Peoples)一书中,曾这样描写居住在不列颠的旧石器人:很明显,那些赤身裸体或只披着兽皮的男人和女人或觅食于原始密林之中,或涉猎于沼泽、草滩至于他们所说的语言,尚无史料可查。大约在公元前3000年,伊比利亚人(Iberians)从地中海地区来到不列颠岛定居。他们给不列颠带来了新石器(Neolithic)文化,同时征服了先前在那儿居住的旧石器人。大约从公元前500年开始,凯尔特人;(Celts)从欧洲大陆进犯并占领了不列颠诸岛。凯尔特人最初居住在今天德国南部地区,他们是欧洲最早学会制造和使用铁器和金制装饰品的民族;在征服不列颠之前,他们曾征服了今天的法国、西班牙:葡萄牙、意大利等地区;来到不列颠后,一部分凯尔特人在今天的爱尔兰和苏格兰定居下来,其余的一部分占领了今天的英格兰的南部和东部。每到一处,他们都对伊比利亚人进行残酷的杀戳。凯尔特人讲凯尔特语。今天居住在苏格兰北部和西部山地的盖尔人(Gaels)仍使用这种语言。在英语形成之前凯尔特语是在不列颠岛上所能发现的唯一具有史料依据的最早的格言。

公元前55年的夏天,罗马帝国的恺撒大帝(Julius Caesar)在征服高卢(Gaul)之后来到不列颠。那时,他的目的未必是想征服不列颠,而是想警告凯尔特人不要支持那些居住在高占的、正受罗马人奴役的凯尔特同族人。恺撒大帝的这次‘不列颠之行’并没有给罗马帝国带来什么好处,相反却在一定程度上降低了他的威信。第二年,即公元前54年的夏天,恺撒大帝第二次亲临不列颠。这次,他在不列颠岛东南部站稳了脚跟,并与当地的凯尔特人发生了一些冲突。恺撒大帝虽然取胜,但并没有能使凯尔特人屈服。不久,他又回到了高卢;在以后的大约一百年间,罗马帝国并没有对不列颠构成很大的威胁。 英国历史上的真正的“罗马人的征服”(Roman Conquest)是在公元后43年开始的。当时罗马皇帝克罗迪斯(Claudius)率领四万人马,用了三年时间终于征服了不列颠岛的中部和中南部随后,整个的英格兰被罗马牢牢控制了。,随着军事占领,罗马文化与风格习惯渗入不列颠。罗马人的服装、装饰品、陶器和玻璃器皿很快在不列颠得到推广;社会生活开始:“罗马化”这必然导致拉丁语在不列颠的传播。在以胜利者自居的罗马人看来,凯尔特人无疑是“低贱的”,凯尔特语自然不能登“大雅之堂”那时,在不列颠,官方用语、法律用语、商业用语等均是拉丁语;拉丁语成了上层凯尔特人的第二语言。这就是凯尔特语词汇为什么很少能幸存下来的历史原因。在今日英语中,只是在一些地名和河流名称方面还保留着凯尔特的词汇成分。例如the Thames ,the Cam,the Dee ,the Avon , the Esk , the Exe , the Stour , the Aire , the Derwent , the Ouse , the Severn , the Tees , the Trent , the Wye等,均是凯尔特人命名的河流。在Duncombe, Winchcombe, Holcome, Cumberland, Coombe 等地名中,也可看到凯尔特语cumb (=deep valley::深谷)一词的成分,在Torcross , Torquay,Torrington等地名中,尚保留着凯尔特语torr (=high rock or peak;高岩或山顶)一词的成分。英国著名城市多尔佛(Dover)、约克(York)的名称也源于凯尔特语。罗马人占领不列颠长达四百年,直到公元407年,罗马人才因罗马帝国内外交困不得不开始撤离不列颠。

大约在公元449年,居住在西北欧的三个日耳曼部族侵犯不列颠。他们是盎格鲁(Angles)、撒克逊人(Saxons)和朱特人(Jutes)他们乘船横渡北海,借罗马帝国衰落、自顾不暇之机‘一举侵入大不列颠诸岛。他们遭到凯尔特人的顽强抵抗,征服过程拖延了一个半世纪之久:到了公元六世纪末,大不列颠请岛上原先的居民凯尔特人几乎灭绝,幸存者或逃入山林.或沦为奴隶。这就是英国历史上发生的“日耳曼人征服”,亦称“条顿人征服”Teutonic Conquest)。这次外来入侵.对英语的形成起了十分关键的作用。

盎格鲁人、撒克逊人和朱特人属古代日耳曼人。分市在北欧日德兰半岛、丹麦诸岛、德国西北沿海一带。在罗马帝国时期,他们往往统称为“蛮族部落”。他们从事畜牧和狩猎,过着半游牧的生活,且很早就知道农耕。他们的土地是氏族的公有财产,农业经营带有原始的流动性质。随着社会的发展,氏族公社逐渐解体,出现了氏族贵族和军事首领。他们的财富和权势在频繁的掠夺中剧增。军事首领名义上是由民众大会推选产生的,实际上都出于同一家族。恩格斯曾把这种氏族部落的管理制度称作军事民主制;他这样写道:“其所以称为军事民主制,是因为战争以及进行战争的组织现在已成为民族生活的正常职能。邻人的财富刺激了各民族的贪欲。这些民族把获得财富看成是最重要的生活目的之一。他们是野蛮人。进行掠夺在他们看来是比进行创造性劳动更容易,甚至更荣誉的事情。以前进行战争,只是为了对侵犯进行报复,或者是为了扩大已经感到不够的领上;观在进行战争,则纯粹是为了掠夺,战争成为经常的职业了。“ 这些所谓的‘蛮族”,在摧毁当时罗马帝国的奴隶制,以及推动西欧封建制度的诞生过程中,起过十分重要的作用。征服不列颠后,盎格鲁人主要占领了洪伯河(the Humber)以北地区;撒克逊人主要占领了泰晤士河以南地区;朱特人主要盘踞在英格兰东南端的肯特(Kent) 和南汉普郡(Southern Hampshire);以及位于英格兰之南、靠近今天的朴次茅斯(Portsmouth)的怀特岛(the Isle of Wight),形成许多小国。公元七世纪初,这些小园合并为七个王国:南部有撒克逊人的威塞克斯(Wessex)、萨塞克斯(Sussex)和埃塞克斯(Essex);东北部和中部有盎格鲁人的梅尔西亚(Mercia)、诺森伯里亚(Northumbria),和东盎格里亚(East Anglia);东南部有朱特人的肯特(Kent)王国。各国竞相争雄,达两百年之久;在英国历史上称为“七国时代”(the Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy)。这三个日耳曼部族虽然有各自的方言,但这些方言均属低地西日耳曼语(Low West Germanic)。有许多共同之处.因此三个部落在语言方面基本上是相通的。他们都使用一种叫做茹尼克(Runic)的文字。这种文字是古代日耳曼各民族通用的文字.它的字母主要由直线组成,以便于刻在木头或石块上,是一种由古希腊语和拉丁语发展起来的北欧碑文字。随着人类社会的发展,盎格鲁人、撒克逊人和朱特人逐渐形成统一的英吉利民族.他们各自使用的方言也逐渐溶合,出现了一种新的语言枣盎格鲁撒克逊语(Anglo-Saxon)。
这就是古英语。它是在特定的地理和历史环境中,经过一系列民族迁移与征服的过程所形成的。

那么English和England的名称是如何来的呢?原来,凯尔特人将征服他们的盎格鲁人、撒克逊人和朱特人习惯地统称为Saxons(撒克逊人)。早期拉丁语学者仿照凯尔特人的习惯.也将这三个日耳曼部族称作Saxones.并将他们征服的不列颠称作Saxonia。到了公元七世纪. 由于用森伯利亚王国和梅尔西亚王国在政治上和文化上的影响剧增,而在这棿

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THE ORIGINS OF THE PROVERB*关于英语谚语起源与发展的文章!

THE definition of a proverb is too difficult to repay the undertaking; and should we fortunately combine in a single definition all the essential elements and give each the proper emphasis, we should not even then have a touchstone. An incommunicable quality tells us this sentence is proverbial and that one is not. Hence no definition will enable us to identify positively a sentence as proverbial. Those who do not speak a language can never recognize all its proverbs, and similarly much that is truly proverbial escapes us in Elizabethan and older English. Let us be content with recognizing that a proverb is a saying current among the folk. At least so much of a definition is indisputable, and we shall see and weigh the significance of other elements later.

The origins of the proverb have been little studied. We can only rarely see a proverb actually in the making, and any beliefs we have regarding origins must justify themselves as evident or at least plausible. Proverbs are invented in several ways: some are simple apothegms and platitudes elevated to proverbial dignity, others arise from the symbolic or metaphoric use of an incident, still others imitate already existing proverbs, and some owe their existence to the condensing of a story or fable. It is convenient to distinguish as "learned" proverbs those with a long literary history. This literary history may begin in some apt Biblical or classical phrase, or it may go back to a more recent source. Such "learned" proverbs differ, however, in only this regard from other proverbs. Whatever the later history may be, the manner of ultimate invention of all proverbs, "learned" or "popular," falls under one or another of the preceding heads.

It is not proper to make any distinction in the treatment of "learned" and "popular" proverbs. The same problems exist for all proverbs with the obvious limitation that, in certain cases, historical studies are greatly restricted by the accidents of preservation. We can ordinarily trace the "learned" proverb down a long line of literary tradition, from the classics or the Bible through the Middle Ages to the present, while we may not be so fortunate with every "popular" proverb. For example, Know thyself may very well have been a proverb long before it was attributed to any of the seven wise men or was inscribed on the walls of the temple of Delphic Apollo. Juvenal was nearer the truth when he said it came from Heaven: "E caelo descendit " (Sat., xi, 27). Yet so far as modern life is concerned, the phrase owes its vitality to centuries of bookish tradition. St. Jerome termed Don't look a gift horse in the mouth a common proverb, when he used it to refer to certain writings which he had regarded as free will offerings and which critics had found fault with: "Noli (ut vulgare est proverbium) equi dentes inspicere donati." We cannot hope to discover whether the modern proverb owes its vitality to St. Jerome or to the vernacular tradition on which he was drawing. St. Jerome also took The wearer best knows where the shoe wrings him from Plutarch, but we may conjecture that this proverb, too, was first current on the lips of the folk. Obviously the distinction between "learned" and "popular" is meaningless and is concerned merely with the accidents of history.

PROVERBIAL APOTHEGMS
Often some simple apothegm is repeated so many times that it gains proverbial currency: Live and learn; Mistakes will happen; Them as has gets; Enough is enough; No fool like an old fool; Haste makes waste; Business is business; What's done's done. Characteristic of such proverbs is the absence of metaphor. They consist merely of a bald assertion which is recognized as proverbial only because we have heard it often and because it can be applied to many different situations. It is ordinarily difficult, if not impossible, to determine the age of such proverbial truisms. The simple truths of life have been noted in every age, and it must not surprise us that one such truth has a long recorded history while another has none. It is only chance, for example, that There is a time for everything has a long history in English,--Shakespeare used it in the Comedy of Errors, ii, 2: "There's a time for all things,"--and it is even in the Bible: "To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven" (Omnia tempus habent, et suis spatiis transeunt universa sub caelo, Eccles. iii, I), while Mistakes will happen or If you want a thing well done, do it yourself have, on the contrary, no history at all.

The full text of this article is published in De Proverbio - Issue 3:1996 & Issue 4:1996, an electronic book, available from amazon.com and other leading Internet booksellers.

PROVERBIAL TYPES
New proverbs have often been made on old models. Certain frames lend themselves readily to the insertion of entirely new ideas. Thus the contrast in Young . . ., old . . . in such a proverb as Young saint, old devil yields a model for Junge Bettschwester, alte Betschwester. A methodical comparison would probably reveal the proverb which gave the original impulse to the formation of the others; but no one has ever undertaken a study of this sort. Martha Lenschau conceives the development as follows: Young angel, old devil (Jung Engel, alt Teufel, thirteenth century); Young soldiers, old beggars (Junge Soldaten, alte Bettler, seventeenth century). The first form made no distinction for sex. When the substitution of "knight" or "soldier" made the distinction, a by-form for women was invented on the same model: Junge Hure, alt Kupplerin appears to have been the first of such by-forms, although Jung Hure, alt Wettermacherin must also be ancient, since the notion involved in "Wettermacherin" reaches far back. The most recent development is probably the Low German Young gamblers, old beggars (Junge Späler, ole Bedler), and the corruption Young musicians, old beggars (Junge Musikanten, alde Beddellüde), which arises from the misunderstanding of "Späler," 'players' (i. e. gamblers), as 'players of music' and the later substitution of a synonym.

It is not always easy to recognize or identify the earliest form which provided the model for later developments; and until several proverbs have been minutely examined from this point of view and our methods of study have been improved, it is hard to say which arguments are safe to use and which are unsafe. In all probability, we may trust to the general principles which have been worked out for märchen, i. e. those employed in the so-called Finnish or historico-geographical method. The relative age and distribution of the various forms of a proverb will throw much light on the development. In the present instance, for example, we might regard the old and widely known Jung gewohnt, alt getan ('What one is accustomed to in youth, one does in old age') as a possible model, even of the whole group. Certainly it has given us Jung gefreut, alt gereut (' Rejoiced in youth, repented in age') and as a secondary development: Jung gefreit, alt gereut ('Married in youth, repented in age'). Since, however, Young saint, old devil is even older and more widely known, I am inclined to consider it the parent of all later forms. Often other arguments than age and wide currency may be brought into court. Usually, a dialectal variation which is essential to a particular form and which limits it to a narrow area is secondary in origin, e. g. Jung gefreit, alt geklait ('Wed in youth, bewailed in old age') can have arisen only in a region where 'geklagt' is pronounced "geklait." So, too, Jung gefreit, alt gereut originated in a region--somewhat larger, to be sure, than the one just mentioned--where the dialectal pronounciation of "gereut" made the rhyme tolerable.

A few more illustrations of the creation of new proverbs on the model of old ones will suffice. A familiar German proverbial type employs the notion that the essential qualities of an object show themselves the very beginning, e. g. Was ein Häkchen werden soll, krümmt sich beizeiten (' Whatever is to be a hook, bends early'). English representatives of this type are rare, but we may cite Timely crooks that tree that will be a cammock (i. e. 'gambrel,' a bent piece of wood used by butchers to hang carcasses on) and It pricketh betimes that shall be a sharp thorn. A German derivative of the type is Was ein Nessel werden soll, brennt beizeiten ('Whatever is to be a nettle, burns early'). This proverb has found rather wide currency. Although the evidence is not all in, the type or at least its ready employment in new proverbs is German. The form characteristic of Es sind nicht alle Jäger die das Horn blasen ('They are not all hunters who blow horns'), a form which appears to have been first recorded by Varro ('Non omnes, qui habent citharam, sunt citharoedi'), enjoyed a remarkable popularity in mediaeval Germany and gave rise to many new proverbs, e. g. They are not all cooks who carry long knives (Es sind nicht alle Köche, die lange Messer tragen); They are not all friends who laugh with you (Zijn niet alle vrienden, die hem toelachen). Outside of Germany and countries allied culturally, the form appears to have had no notable success, except in All is not gold that glitters, which refers to a thing and not a person. Seiler thinks that" Many are called, but few are chosen" (Multi enim sunt vocati, pauci vero electi, Matt. xx, 16; xxii, 14) was the ultimate model for these proverbs, but the similarity is one of thought and not of form. Possibly one could imagine a class based on simple balance and contrast, of which the young-old type and the called-chosen type might both be derivatives, but the fundamental differences in syntactical structure speak strongly against a development of this sort. Young saint, old devil is an old proverbial form which has no verb; Many are called, but few are chosen consists of balanced, antithetical sentences; All is not gold that glitters uses a subordinate clause. The syntactical differences are so great that an influence from one of these types on another does not seem likely.

The full text of this article is published in De Proverbio - Issue 3:1996 & Issue 4:1996, an electronic book, available from amazon.com and other leading Internet booksellers.

http://www.deproverbio.com/DPjournal/DP,2,1,96/ORIGINS.html
Can Money Buy Happiness?Can money buy happiness? Different people have different opinions. Some think yes, while others hold the opposite.It is true that with enough money one can buy all the things one wants, and live a life of comfort and security. However, it is equally true that lack of money causes great distress. It is a common view that "money is the root of all evil." The pursuit of money drives many people to cheat and steal. In some places there is nothing that cannot be bought with money, resulting in corrupt societies where everybody is miserable.So, money does not necessarily mean happiness. It all depends on how it is used. If we make honest and sensible use of money, it can be a stepping-stone to happiness l Although money cannot buy happiness, it can make happiness possible if it is employed sensibly.

  金钱能买来幸福吗?

  金钱能买来幸福吗?不同的人有不同的回答。有的人认为能,有的人则持相反的意见。

  诚然一个人如果有足够的钱可以买到他想要的所有物品,过上舒适稳定的生活。然而,同样缺钱往往引起巨大的忧伤。人们常常认为“金钱是万恶之源”,对金钱的追求驱使许多人去骗去偷。在某些地方,没有钱买不到的东西,导致社会的腐化堕落。

  所以,金钱并不一定就意味着幸福。这取决于怎样使用金钱,如果我们诚信明智地使用金钱,它将是幸福的基石。尽管金钱买不到幸福,但它可以使幸福成为可能。

1 The only way to have a friend is to be one
2 all are not friends that speak us fair
3a man is known by his friends.
4Better an open enemy than a false friend.
1.交友的唯一方法是自己必须够朋友
2.说好话的不一定都是朋友。
3.人以群分
4.公开的敌人胜于虚假的朋友。
A
爱情是盲目的 Love is blind.

B
被打得青一块紫一块 be beaten black and blue

不劳则无获 No pains ,no gains.

不怕迟只怕不做 Better late than never.

C
此路不通 Blocks!

D
当断不断,必受其患 He who hesitates is lost.

F
发光的并不都是金子 All is not gold that glitters.

G
过着吵吵闹闹的生活(夫妻) lead a cat and dog life

J

金窝,银窝,不如自己的草窝。 East,west,home is best.

酒好不必挂幌子 Good wine needs no bush.

L
良好的开端是成功的一半 Well begun is half done.

N
牛饮 drink like a fish

Q
情人眼里出西施 Love blinds a man to imperfections.

R
认识从实践开始 Knowledge begins with practice.

S
上气不接下气 out of breath

T
天亮了 Day breaks;Day dawns.

X
信不信由你 Believe it or not.

行动胜于空谈 Actions speak louder than words.

需要是发明之母 Necessity is the mother of invention.

Y
一只耳朵进,一只耳朵出 go in at one ear and out at the other

有其父必有其子 Like father,like son.

Z
这怪不着谁 No one is to blame for it.

真是活一天学一天 Live and learn.

拙匠常怪工具差 Bad workmen often blame their tools.
A
爱不释手 can’t bear to part with it / stand parting with it / putting it down (back, aside) / leaving it aside

B
笨鸟先飞 the early bird catches the worn

彪炳史册 make/create history

博览群书 browse through/over some books be well/widely read

不尽人意 be not all roses

不惜费用 spare no expense

不遗余力 to the best of one's power

不在话下 let alone

不知所措 to be at a loss/at sea

C
初出茅庐 to be young and inexperienced/to be a green hand

出神深思 be buried in thought

吹毛求疵 find faults with/be particular about

纯属偶然 purely by accident

从头到脚 from head to foot

从头至尾 from beginning to end

粗枝大叶 to be crude and careless/to be careless

D
大智若愚 still waters run deep

呆若木鸡 to be dumbstruck/dumbfounded

东张西望 look around

独具匠心 be original

独立无援 (all) on one's own

对牛弹琴 to cast pearls before a swine/to play the lute to a cow

G
敢作敢为 be aggressive

隔墙有耳 Walls have ears.

公事公办 Business is business.

固执己见 stick to one's own opinions

刮目相看 look at sb differently/with new eyes/regard sb in a totally different light

寡廉鲜耻 be shameless

H
毫无怨言 without complaint

画蛇添足 to plant the lily/to draw a snake and add feet to it

黄粱美梦 a dream/a fond dream

挥金如土 to spend money like water/dirt

悔过自新 turn over a new leaf

J
坚持不渝 hold on/out

坚如磐石 as solid as a rock

艰苦奋斗 fight one's way

贱买贵卖 buy cheap and sell dear

焦躁不安 be restless

精力充沛 be full of energy

酒肉朋友 fair-weather friend

九死一生 a narrow escape

居高临下 be commanding

K
开门见山 to come/get to the point

空中楼阁 a castle in the air

M
毛遂自荐 to offer to do sth./to volunteer one’s service

没精打采 feel blue

每况愈下 go from bad to worse

P
旁敲侧击 beat around/about the bush

平安无恙 safe and sound

平易近人 be approachable

Q
恰好相反 just on the contrary/just the opposite

恰到好处 to the point

巧舌如簧 to have a smooth tongue

千方百计 try every means

倾国倾城 to be extremely beautiful

全心全意 heart and soul

R
仁至义尽 do our best

如释重负 take a load/weight off sb's mind

S
三思而行 look before you leap

深思熟虑 turn over

生动逼真 true to life

生机勃勃 look alive

生死攸关 between/of life and death

世世代代 from age to age

首屈一指 second to none

熟能生巧 Practice makes perfect.

数以百计 by hundreds

水泄不通 be blocked with crowds of people

随机应变 rise to the occasion

T
挑挑拣拣 pick and choose

W
玩忽职守 neglect one's duty

无论如何 in any case

无与伦比 beyond compare

勿庸置疑 no doubt

X
洗耳恭听 be a good listener

喜形于色 One's face brightened/lit up.

小心为妙 One cannot be too careful.

相差甚远 not nearly

心安理得 feel at ease

悬梁刺股 to be very/extraordinarily hard-working

血浓于水 Blood is thicker than water.

Y
妖魔鬼怪 evil spirits

一箭双雕 Kill two birds with one stone.

一举双得 Kill two birds with one stone.

一事无成 accomplish nothing

一笑了之 laugh off

易如反掌 to be a piece of cake/to be as easy as turning over one’s hand

引人入胜 be attractive

引人注目 be attractive

犹豫不决 beside over/hesitate over

有福同享 有难同当 for better or (for) worse

Z
掌上明珠 an apple in one’s eye/a pearl in the palm

直呼其名 call a person by name

自吹自擂 boast

自高自大 look big

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