A poor apology
It is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C í Qi ó NGL ǐ Q ū, which means that the reason is not tenable and can not be refuted. It comes from the biography of Zheng Xian in the book of Song Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As a predicate and attribute, it refers to "Li Kui" and "Li Kui". When we read about it, we can see that its meaning is not wrong, and it can be explained in hundreds of words. The outsider's words are poor and unjust, while the outsider's words are not rewarded.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: poor words and unjust reasoning
The origin of Idioms
The biography of Zheng Xianzhi in the book of song states: "when it comes to speech, people will disobey it and dare not make it difficult; when it comes to freshness, it will be difficult. If there is no time off, it will be difficult to make it difficult. If there is no time off, it will be necessary for Gaozu to say goodbye to poverty and reason and then put it in order."
Idiom explanation
The reason is not tenable and has been refuted to nothing.
Chinese PinYin : cí qióng lǐ qū
A poor apology
alternate intimidation and bribery. wēi pò lì yòu