trifles
In Chinese, Pinyin is B ó w ù x ì g ù, which means trivial things. It comes from the book of Han, the first biography of Xiongnu.
Analysis of Idioms
A trifle
The origin of Idioms
In the book of the Han Dynasty, a biography of the Huns, it is said that "the details of things, the scheming of counsellors, and their loss are not enough to leave kundi's joy."
Idiom usage
It's a combination; it's a subject or an object; it's a very subtle thing. In Wang Anshi's book of ten thousand words of the upper emperor of the Song Dynasty, it is said that "the law of the former king was the most urgent one, and it can't be punished today, but it's forbidden for those who are not in a hurry to harm and cure because of the details of things." Xue Fucheng of Qing Dynasty wrote the fact that Chen duchen Zhongxun was drafted on behalf of Li Boxiang: "its main purpose is to abide by the treaty and show good faith, so that they can't try to show off to me, or ignore the details." Chapter 159 of the popular romance of the Republic of China written by Cai Dongfan and Xu Xun's father: "generals in our provinces, who are usually petty, should discard them and concentrate their energy on breaking thieves."
Chinese PinYin : bó wù xì gù
trifles
cheerful and pleasing to the eye. yuè mù shǎng xīn
Cheerfulness and cheerfulness. gǔ wǔ huān xīn
stand aloof from worldly success. yú shì wú zhēng
be dispelled like the thawing of ice. dòng jiě bīng shì