a single thread can 't make a cord
Single silk without thread, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ā ns ī B ù Xi à n, which means that a piece of silk can not be spun into thread, from lianhuanji.
The origin of Idioms
The second discount of yuan · anonymous's "serial plan": "what's the point? I'll make you round again without the moon."
Idiom usage
I want to rescue monk Sha. It's true that I can't cry alone. The 30th chapter of journey to the west by Wu Chengen in Ming Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
A single tree makes no forest, a single hand makes no sound
Chinese PinYin : dān sī bù xiàn
a single thread can 't make a cord
circumstances change with the passage of time. shí yí shì yì
with hands and feet covered by thick callosities as a result of hard work. shǒu zú chóng jiǎn