bang for your buck
In Chinese, the Pinyin is Hu ò zh ē NJI à sh í, which means that the goods are not fake and the price is real. The description is real and true. It's from Wu Jianren's strange situation witnessed in 20 years in Qing Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The fifth chapter of Wu Jianren's "strange situation witnessed in 20 years" in the Qing Dynasty: "this is one of the ways to solicit business, but I wonder if there is any words like" the real thing, the old and the young are not deceived "
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] worthy of the name and worthy of the reputation
Idiom usage
A person or thing is a person or thing in the world It's a real business to deal with yourself. It can't be fake. (Chapter 17 of biography of heroes and heroines by Wen Kang in Qing Dynasty)
Chinese PinYin : huò zhēn jià shí
bang for your buck
tramp over mountains and through ravines. fān shān yuè lǐng
Poor apes rush to the forest. qióng yuán bēn lín