be an anachronism
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B à OC á NSH à uqu à, which means to hold on to the old things. He is conservative and does not seek improvement. It comes from the biography of Liu Xin in the history of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
It comes from the biography of Liu Xin in the book of Han Dynasty: "I still want to be conservative, and I'm afraid to see the private intention of breaking, but I can't be good at serving the public heart of righteousness."
Idiom usage
All these seem to be the result of ~, a collection of opinions. (Zhu Ziqing's book of changes II) if we don't get rid of the old ideas of, we can't better join the tide of reform. Reform of any old system will inevitably be obstructed by the people of.
Idiom story
Liu Xin, the youngest son of Liu Xiang, a famous litterateur in the Western Han Dynasty, was the commander of Qi Du Wei and the doctor of Che Guang Lu. He suggested to Han Ai Di that he send special personnel to study Zuo Zhuan. His colleagues were very dissatisfied. He accused them of being conservative and conservative. Finally, they were expelled from the capital by their colleagues and had to be the prefect of Hanoi county. this idiom means to hold on to the old things. He is conservative and does not seek improvement.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: following the old, sticking to the old, sticking to the old, sticking to the old, sticking to the old, sticking to the old, sticking to the old, sticking to the new
Chinese PinYin : bào cán shǒu quē
be an anachronism
Nine clans and seven ancestors. jiǔ zōng qī zǔ
accept what is wrong as right when one grows accustomed to it. xí fēi chéng shì
practise groundless criticisms. shuō hēi dào bái