be a gross error
In Chinese idioms, Pinyin is d à mi à B à R á n, which means a big mistake, completely inconsistent with the reality. From the book of Ren Shaoqing.
Idiom explanation
Absurdity: absurdity, mistake; however: so, so.
The origin of Idioms
Sima Qian of the Han Dynasty wrote in his letter to Ren Shaoqing: "I think about exhausting my unworthy talent day and night, and I will devote myself to my duty, in order to woo my relatives and flatter my Lord. And there is a great fallacy in the matter, otherwise it will not be true! "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or object; used in writing. On the face of it, it seems that if we call ourselves the Red Army, we can not have party representatives. It's a big fallacy. Selected works of Mao Zedong the struggle of Jinggangshan
Idiom story
In the Western Han Dynasty, Sima Qian, a famous historian, was forced to surrender because of the failure of the Han Dynasty's attack on Xiongnu. He expressed his love for Li Ling and was punished in the palace and put into prison. In the face of this great humiliation, he had to write to his friend Ren an to tell his misfortune: "he is not a man of wood and stone, and he is alone with the legal officials." It is a fallacy that one's loyalty will be destroyed.
Chinese PinYin : dà miù bù rán
be a gross error
punish one as a warning to a hundred. chéng yī jǐng bǎi
bone of bones and flesh of flesh. zhì qīn gǔ ròu
with one 's face flushed and one 's ears hot. miàn hóng ěr rè