Idiom Story: You reap what you sow. 成语:种瓜得瓜
Idiomatic story with the character "melon"
Sowing Melons to Get Melons Idioms Story
Idiom Story: You reap what you sow.
One day, a fisherman with a dream
went out to sea with great confidence.
Stumbled upon a snake swimming beside his boat.
With a frog in its mouth.
The fisherman took pity on the frog.
He stooped down and saved the frog from the snake's mouth.
Then he took pity on the hungry snake.
So he found some tasty food and fed the snake.
The snake swam away happily.
The fisherman was pleased with his good deed.
The next day.
he suddenly felt that something was hitting his boat again.
It turned out that the snake was back again.
It was carrying two frogs in its mouth.
The fisherman rewarded the snake with a lot of delicious food.
The snake swam away happily again.
The fisherman smiled again.
You reap what you sow, you reap what you sow:
The original meaning is that if you plant the seeds of a melon, you will harvest watermelons.
If you plant the seeds of beans, you will harvest more beans.
Sentence: Xiao Dai has always studied hard, so she got into the ideal university, which is exactly the same as planting melon to reap melon, and planting beans to reap beans.
I'm so great. I'm a haha rabbit.
Quack~Quack~