be
Disorderly, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z á Lu à NW ú zh à ng, which means to describe disorderly, disorganized. It comes from the preface to send Meng Dongye away.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] in a mess and in a myriad of ways [antonym] in order
The origin of Idioms
Tang Hanyu's preface to sending Meng Dongye away: it is also a speech, which is disorderly and unorganized (their articles are disorderly and unorganized).
Idiom usage
It can be used as predicate, attributive, adverbial, adjective, etc. The preface of Professor Xu's collected works by Song Lian of Ming Dynasty: Huang Zhong and tile cauldron are presented together; spring cauldron and autumn cauldron are presented together; they are disorderly and disorganized; those who stab and squint at people's eyes are not literary. Preface to shuowenjudu written by Wang Yun of Qing Dynasty: Gu Tinglin only saw the five tone rhyme spectrum, and he was always confused because of its disorder. Chapter 4 of Wei Wei's the East Part I: many new houses have sprung up outside the village. Because of the wrong and disorderly construction, Guo Xiang has made many detours before he stepped onto the main street. Beethoven, the music giant: don't think the room is in a mess. I once wanted to clean it up, but later I found it was futile. The fire engine couldn't get into the narrow lane. The bucket won't take out much. It's just a lot of monkey business going back and forth. ——Ye Shengtao's a bucket of water
Chinese PinYin : zá luàn wú zhāng
be
To build a house on one's salary. fù xīn gòu táng