What's worse
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is B ū Z ā ochu ò L í, which means to eat distiller's grains and drink thin wine. It refers to the pursuit of getting drunk. It refers to Qu Zhi's obedience to the customs and going with the flow. It refers to the beautiful and intoxicating writing. From the songs of Chu, fisherman.
The origin of Idioms
"The fisherman in the songs of Chu:" everyone is drunk, why not feed them bad and protect them Wenxuan is known as "Xuan". LV Xiangyun: "it's the same thing to feed the dross. Feed, feed. She, drink also. All the dregs are wine. " Hong xingzu's supplementary note: "wine is also thin."
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used in life. Fujian wine is deep red, such as Bianliang wine. Yu Chang was in Linmingguan and asked Li Puzhu for Ming wine to drink Fujian people. "The spirit of this wine," he said It's true. Zhou Lianggong's Book Shadow in Qing Dynasty Volume 4
Chinese PinYin : bū zāo chuò lí
What's worse
hide one 's capacities and hide one 's time. tāo guāng miè jì
Dragon leaping and tiger crouching. lóng yuè hǔ jù
I'm tired of hearing and seeing. yù wén yàn jiàn