lift a sentence out of context
Chinese idioms, Pinyin is Du à nzh à ngzh à ij à, which means to cut the chapter, take the suffix written. There is also a sense of splitting the full text and taking what it needs. It comes from the preface to the collection of yuanjiewenji written by Rongzhou jinglueshi of Tang Dynasty by Li Shangyin of Tang Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
The chapter should be judged and written. There is also a sense of splitting the full text and taking what it needs. (searching for and extracting fragments of articles means that reading is limited to words.)
The origin of Idioms
Li Shangyin of Tang Dynasty wrote the preface to the collection of yuanjiewenji written by the jinglueshi of Rongzhou in Tang Dynasty: "he is quick in anger, quick in strength, and can travel thousands of miles without seeing his enemy; he sings high and drinks in the court, and extracts sentences out of context, just like vibration and life."
Idiom usage
It refers to plagiarism.
Chinese PinYin : duàn zhāng zhāi jù
lift a sentence out of context
regard a hazardous location as level ground -- no fear of danger and difficulties. shì xiǎn rú yí
as far apart as heaven and earth. tiān rǎng zhī gé
be of noble character and high prestige. dé gāo wàng zhòng
be in a fix the horns of a dilemma. jìn tuì wéi gǔ