be worth reading a hundred times
Chinese idioms, Pinyin is B ǎ ID ú B ù y à n, describes poetry or books written very well, no matter how many times you read it, you don't feel tired. It comes from Song Sushi's poem "send Anton Xiucai to the west".
The origin of Idioms
Song Sushi's poem "send Anton Xiucai to return to the west after he lost his understanding" says: "I am not tired of reading old books for a hundred times, and I know it by myself after reading them carefully."
Analysis of Idioms
words whose meaning is similar
be never seen without a book in hand
antonym
Tasteless, uninteresting, uninteresting, uninteresting
Idiom usage
It is used for the book or article that you like to read
Examples
Zhu Ziqing's article is so good that I never tire of reading it.
Separate interpretation of words
Read: 1. Repeat. Not tired of: 1. Not dislike; not repel. 2. Not suitable. Not satisfied; not full. Weariness, satiety. 4. Not satisfied.
Chinese PinYin : bǎi dú bù yàn
be worth reading a hundred times
beat drums and clang gongs -- in + battle. jī gǔ míng jīn
Unfortunately, it's medium. bù xìng ér yán zhòng
Simple words are few in meaning. yán jiǎn yì shǎo
Copy the picture and accept the law. yīng tú shòu lù
words do not correspond with deeds. yán xíng bù fú