Shut up
The Chinese idiom, B ì m é NJ ì NH ù in pinyin, means to close doors and windows and block the cave, which is often called strict prevention. It comes from CAI Yuanding, the fourth biography of scholars in the history of Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
See "shut up". "If there is a disaster, it can not be avoided behind closed doors," according to CAI Yuanding, the fourth biography of scholars in the history of Song Dynasty The man said, "if you are disrespectful at the beginning, you will accept your fate now. "Those who love Yuanding are those who should thank shengtu." Yuanding said, "why not refuse to learn? If there are disasters, they can not be avoided behind closed doors. Yi Shu admonished the scholars and said, "walking alone is not worthy of shadow, sleeping alone is not worthy of quilt. Don't let me offend you, so I'm lax. (twenty five histories and twenty song Histories)
Idiom usage
To be on guard is to be on guard. Example: the residents told each other that the ghost was coming. Every day, they turned to the night and often closed their doors. Niu Xiu's the sequel of GUSHENG yanlingdao in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : bì kǒu jǐn hù
Shut up
be fashionable and adapted to the environment. yìng shí duì jǐng
execute one as a warning to others. shā yī lì bǎi