Broken and incomplete
Duan Cuan is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Du Cuan NGU cuqu cu275b, meaning to refer to fragments and precious words, the same as "Duan Guisui Bi". It's from "blow the net record · the stele of two basic clouds".
The origin of Idioms
According to ye tingguan's "blowing net record · erchu Yunhui stele" in Qing Dynasty, "Yu Jin has got the rubbings. Although the characters are rambling, the survivors still have a look. It's rare to see the lack of talent. "
Idiom usage
as an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences.
Chinese PinYin : duàn guī quē bì
Broken and incomplete
take precautions against a possible danger. qǔ tū yí xīn
one 's heart is already upset. fāng cùn yǐ luàn
morning bell and evening drum -- reminders. chén zhōng mù gǔ
turn from a guest into a host. fǎn kè wéi zhǔ
Looking from the east to the West. dōng wàng xī guān