Full of pillars
As a Chinese idiom, CH à NGD à NGH à NNI ú in pinyin means that books are piled as high as pillars, and most of them are sweating. It describes the wealth of books or writings. It comes from the epitaph of Mr. Lu Wentong by Liu Zongyuan of Tang Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
It means that the books are piled high and the pillars, and the horses and oxen are sweating. It describes the wealth of books or writings.
Idioms and allusions
source
It comes from Liu Zongyuan's epitaph of Mr. Lu Wentong in Tang Dynasty: "it is a book, where it is full of pillars, and when it comes out, it is full of sweat, cattle and horses."
Analysis of Idioms
Examples
In the last less than a hundred years, the author is more than ten times, and the work is even more ~, invincible. Chapter 58 of illustrated history of Chinese literature by Zheng Zhenduo
usage
It means a lot
Chinese PinYin : chōng dòng hàn niú
Full of pillars
The sound of chickens and dogs is heard by each other, but not by old age and death. jīquǎnzhīshēng xiāngwén,lǎosǐbùxiāng wǎnglái
make a living away from home. chuǎng dàng jiāng hú
Turn the war into jade and silk. huà gān gē wéi yù bó