how absurd
Chinese idioms, Pinyin is Q ǐ y ǒ UC ǐ L ǐ, which means that there is no such reason. It refers to the absurdity of other people's words and deeds or something. It comes from the biography of Yu in the book of the Southern Qi Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] is inexplicable and inconceivable; and [antonym] is reasonable and natural
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Yu Yu in the book of the Southern Qi Dynasty: "Yu Lin (Wang) was abandoned, but he sighed:" Wang and Xu were bound to abandon Yu all their lives. How can the world be so evil? "
Idiom usage
As a predicate or clause, it has a derogatory meaning. Examples Zhu Zi Yu Lei Volume 16: "if a person has abdominal pain, after all, there is some cold accumulation in the abdomen, and it is necessary to use drugs to remove the cold accumulation, then the pain will stop. How can it be reasonable to not remove the cold accumulation first but want to stop the pain?" Wu Chengen's journey to the West in the Ming Dynasty Chapter 25: how unreasonable! People who cultivate immortals dare to have such a bad heart! The first volume of Yu Shi Ming Yan by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty: "three qiao'er said:" although we are in trouble, how can we be in my humble home? " Lin Mengchu of Ming Dynasty volume 20: how unreasonable! You are the daughter of an official family. How can you be humble when you encounter setbacks? Li Yu of the Qing Dynasty said in his flatfish: is this the only marriage between him and me Chapter 77 of three chivalrous men and five righteousness by Shi Yukun of Qing Dynasty: Bai Yutang drank it in his hand. Tang Sheng looked at it and said, "how reasonable! How reasonable!" Chapter 99 of Wu Jianren's twenty years of witnessing the strange situation in Qing Dynasty: how unreasonable! Your brother TECAN cultivated it. It's hard to get. There's something wrong there. Ba Jin's family 16: when people ask you kindly, you say that! What a shame!
Chinese PinYin : qǐ yǒu cǐ lǐ
how absurd
reach the acme of perfection. jìn shàn jìn měi
The true face of Lushan Mountain. lú shān zhēn miàn mù
live on the land and eat what it produces. shí máo jiàn tǔ