What do you mean by apprentice?

Interpretation of The Apprentice: Describing Running Horse. Metaphor sudden success, rapid rise in office.

Apprentice?

1, from: Yu's poem "Fu Cheng Nan": "I can't care about toads when I fly."

Vernacular translation: dragons and horses thrive, but toads are invisible on the ground.

2. Example: He participated in various workshops and training courses to train talents for the New Deal, although none of them made him successful in his career.

3. Grammar: subject-predicate type; As predicate and attribute; derogatory sense

Extended data:

1, synonym: reaching the sky in one step [y and bù dē ng ti ā n]?

Commentary: Deng: Shang. One step into the sky. Metaphor suddenly reaches a very high level or degree. Sometimes it is also used to describe a person who suddenly succeeds and climbs to a very high position.

From: Qing Xu Ke's Thirty-four Articles of the Qing Dynasty: "Inspection is the supervisor, one step is the sky, supervision is the supervisor, and sven sweeps the floor."

Although Governor Pan was embarrassed, he pretended not to see it, did not pursue it, and had the cheek to be his official and invigilator.

2. antonym: bad time [liú niá n bü li]?

Explanation: fleeting time: fortune tellers used to call it "luck" in a year; Pro: Geely. Refers to a person who has been in an unfortunate state for many years. This is called bad luck.

From: Feng Ming Menglong's Awakening the World and Du Zichun's Three Visits to Chang 'an: "I think my time is not good, so I didn't enjoy myself, or even so. "

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