duplication
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Chu á ngsh à ng à NCHU á ng, which means to set up a bed on the bed. It refers to unnecessary repetition. It comes from the continuation of painting: Mao Ling.
The origin of Idioms
In the Southern Dynasty, Chen Yao's most famous work, continued painting: Mao Leng, is good at layout, not bothering grass. If you are like the fathers, you will have a bed. "
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: to build a house on top of a bed, to paint a snake to add to a foot, to kill a stone with one stone; antonym: to be concise and to the point
Idiom usage
It's an unnecessary thing. The third part of song Shao Yong's "idle chanting" is: "dreams are full of false dreams, and it's not easy to make a bed in bed." Yan Zhitui's preface to Yan's family precepts in the Northern Qi Dynasty said: "the scholars who came from the Jin and Wei dynasties have paid more attention to the theory and complex matters, and they are just like building houses under the house and using their ears on the bed." The Song Dynasty's interpretation of the original book "biography of the lanterns in Jingde: Zen master Dui:" the master said, "don't make a bed."
Chinese PinYin : chuáng shàng ān chuáng
duplication
would rather break than bend. nìng zhé bù wān
advance gradually and entrench oneself at every step. bù bù wéi yíng
make polished impromptu speech. wǔ bù chéng shī
so beautiful as to cause the flowers to blush and the moon to hide -- an incomparable beauty. xiū huā bì yuè
To teach according to one's ability. liàng néng shòu guān