How many cases are there
Dui an Ying Ji, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Du ī à NY í NGJ ī, which means that there is a large backlog of diplomas waiting to be processed, and then there are a lot of books or written materials. It comes from the book of breaking up with shanjuyuan written by Wei Jikang of the Three Kingdoms.
explain
Pile: pile up. Case: desk. Official documents, letters, books, etc. are piled up on the desk. Originally refers to a large backlog of diplomas waiting to be processed. It also means that there are many books or written materials.
source
The book of breaking up with shanjuyuan written by Wei Jikang of the Three Kingdoms states: "it's not convenient to write a book, but it doesn't like to write a book. There are many things in the world, and it's full of opportunities to pile up cases. If you don't answer each other, you will be hurt by teaching. If you want to force yourself, you can't be long."
Examples
Historical manuscripts, day and night, only public documents. Song · Liu Kezhuang's "re xuansuo Wenji HuiZou"
Chinese PinYin : duī àn yíng jī
How many cases are there
exhaust all resources to build up one 's military power. qióng bīng dú wǔ