Closed door
Closed door, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ì m é ns à Ogu ǐ, which means to stop guests, do not contact with. It comes from Du MI, the biography of Danggu in the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Du MI, the biography of Danggu in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "Liu Sheng, a member of the same county, also went back to his hometown from Shu county. He closed his door and had nothing to do." Li Xian's note: "the track, the car track. It's not about human resources. " It is also called "closing the door" and "closing the door".
Idiom usage
It's a combination; it's a predicate, a commendatory. The preface of Qing Dynasty Dai Mingshi's Yugong taper finger: "but Hu Jun was over seventy years old, and he lived in seclusion for thousands of years, discussing the six classics." In the notes of the Western Qing Dynasty in the early period of the Qing Dynasty, it is said that "when you go straight down, you will shut down your door and sit in the library without doing anything." Sun Li's preface to Xiulu collection: "it's exaggerating to say that the door is empty, but it's unnecessary to shut it down."
Chinese PinYin : bì mén sào guǐ
Closed door
act according to one's capability. liàng lì ér wéi
firm , resolute , plain and prudent. gāng yì mù nè