What Is Aerophagia?
Devour, Chinese words, pinyin tn shì, swallow, swallow; metaphor dissolves, annihilates.
- tn shì
- 1. Swallow; swallow.
- 1. Swallow; swallow.
- Jin Guoxun's "Long Snake Praise": The long-necked hunger is a hundred hunts, and the juvenile is like a cricket. The flying group walks away, not swallowing.
- The third poem of Tang Yuanzhang's "Bee Bee": Lei Yan devoured it, and the dead nest was removed.
- Tang Li Zhao's "Tang Guo Shi Bu" volume: At the beginning, Liu Pi had a heartache, and people came from outside, like a swallow.
- Qing Shenfu's Six Chapters of a Floating Life · Xing Qing Ji Qu: Ducks on their necks, devoured.
- Sun Li's "Xiulu Ji · Dream of a Drama": This is like the wind and sand destroying the flower tree ...
- 2. Still annexing and merging.
- "The Book of Later Han Dynasty · Biography of the Southern Hun": It was descended to future generations, and it was common practice to finally devour the Shenxiang and the emperor's house in Qiuxu.
- Tang Liu Zhiji's "Shitong · Limited Limit": Zang Hong, Tao Qian, Liu Yu, Gongsun Yu, born at the end of the season, and devoured each other.
- Preface of Song Luyou's "Fu Jixuan System": Jian Yanzhong, driving south across the country, devouring all his energy.
- Liang Chenyu's "The Story of Huan Shao · Mou Wu": Fucha has the ambition to devour, and the widowed person has no plan to resist the enemy.
- 3. The metaphor dissolves and annihilates.
- Wu Gang's Lop Nur, the Lost Fairy Lake: Kurukum to Lobzhuang and the Taklimakan Desert, the world's second largest desert, closed together and devoured the green Great Wall in the gap. There were 197 national roads crossing Buried in the desert.
- Mao Dun's "": She felt that only emptiness and loneliness had spread around her, surrounded her, and devoured her. [2]
- Permanent chivalry "Wu Yan" poem: I was swallowed and shocked by these waves.
- Zweig's Great Tragedy: The biting cold devoured their already exhausted bodies. [3]