Kick XX, the research begins! ! !
This is an idiom. When you see an idiom, it is customary to find its source. Looking it up in the dictionary, the word first appeared in the classics of the Qing Dynasty ... I thought it was from Zuo Zhuan or Sun Tzu's Art of War or something. ......
First of all, explain in the dictionary, the number of spelling words =v=
Stealing the day: a metaphor for secretly changing the truth of things to deceive others.
Li Qingyu's "With Fragrance and Curtain Resistance" "It is unpredictable to turn bad into good, and ghosts can't be prevented another day."
Chapter 53 of Qing Li Garbo's Officialdom in Appearance: "Let's talk about Yin Zichong's writing to the original shareholders after he changed his career and the money came."
= = What a stupid dictionary! You didn't make the words "steal", "day", "change" and "day" clear at all.
Change the dictionary and keep turning. ......
Thief, stealing, is quietly taking other people's things for yourself. However, this meaning came later. In the pre-Qin classics, "stealing" means "scraping by", and in modern Chinese, "drag out an ignoble existence" and "stealing peace" all use this meaning. In addition, "stealing" also means "indifference" in the pre-Qin period, and "The Analects of Confucius Taber" means "don't abandon the old, the people don't steal". In other words, people in higher positions will not dislike the elderly, so people will not be indifferent. =v= So, in ancient Chinese, should "stealing others" mean "heartless"?
"Steal" means "steal" in the Han Dynasty. In the pre-Qin period, "stealing" was used instead of "stealing". For example, Zhuangzi said, "Whoever steals a hook will be punished, and whoever steals a country will be a vassal."
Later, "stealing" extended the meaning of "hiding". For example, "peeping" means "looking behind the scenes". For example, "stealing the beam and replacing the column" means "stealing the beam and replacing the column", but it cannot be understood as "stealing the beam and replacing the column".
Everyone must have found that the structure of "stealing the sun" and "stealing the column" is exactly the same, that is to say, "stealing the sun" and "stealing" are both "hiding". The so-called "stealing the sky" literally means "hiding the sky."
With the number of words here, I seriously doubt that "stealing the sun" is an exaggerated form of "stealing columns"
First of all, although the literal meaning of the two idioms is different, the actual meaning is the same, both of which are metaphors of "playing tricks and secretly changing the content of things"; Secondly, the word formation of the two idioms is exactly the same, but the nouns in them have changed, but obviously "stealing the sun" is more exaggerated than "stealing the column" and more loaded with13; Thirdly, "stealing columns" first appeared, which is said to have appeared in ancient books around the Song Dynasty, and "stealing the sun" first appeared in ancient books in the Qing Dynasty, and the order was clear at a glance.
Going back, the first source of the word may be an incorrect version of orz ... ...
The History of the Tao in Song Dynasty recorded ancient legends, but when it comes to Jie Jie's ability of "dragging nine cows and changing the pillars", it was originally emphasized that Jie Jie's power is infinite. In the process of copying books, the ancients somehow copied the word "stealing the column" = = and its meaning has become the present meaning. Then, the great people of China exerted great wisdom and made great efforts.
Writing here, I found that there are already so many words 1 100+, so I decided not to write. Thank you for watching ~ ~ ~