vulgar ideas reappear in one 's mind
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ǐ L ì NF ù m é ng, which means that vulgar ideas happen again. It comes from Huang xianzhuan, the book of the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Song · Hu Jizong's complete collection of books and stories · the category of admiration!
Analysis of Idioms
Similar words: return to life, return to Mongolia
The origin of Idioms
Fan Ye's biography of Huang xianzhuan in the later Han Dynasty in the Southern Song Dynasty: when Huang Sheng was not seen between the time and the moon, the sprouting of stinginess was restored.
Idiom story
Huang Xian, a scholar of the Eastern Han Dynasty, was born in a poor family. He was very knowledgeable when he was young. Xun Shu, a famous scholar, met him and found that he could be his teacher when he was 14 years old. Other people compare Huang Xian with Yuan Lang, who is a meritorious Cao, and think that he surpasses yuan Lang. Zhou Ziju often said, "if I don't see Huang Xian for a while, then the idea of shallow vulgarity for profit will sprout again."
Chinese PinYin : bǐ lìn fù méng
vulgar ideas reappear in one 's mind
see through sb . 's treachery. dòng chá qí jiān
Cucurbitaceae is connected with Cucurbitaceae. guā gě xiāng lián