Two doubts
Two fou bells, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is è RF ǒ uzhen ō nghuॸ, which means that the capacity of two kinds of containers can not be distinguished. Metaphor is not clear. It comes from Chuang Tzu, heaven and earth, written by Zhuang Zhou of the Warring States period.
The origin of Idioms
Chuang Tzu, heaven and earth, written by Chuang Tzu in the Warring States period, Song Dynasty and Zhou Dynasty, said: "it's not suitable to be confused by two fous."
Idiom usage
It's just that people can't tell right from wrong? A refutation of Kang Youwei's revolutionary book by Zhang Binglin
Idiom story
During the Warring States period, the great philosopher Zhuang Zhou told the truth of "two confusions" in Zhuangzi: there are three people doing the same thing, one person is confused, then things can be done; there are two people are confused, then things can not be done. People all over the world are confused. Elegant ideas can't enter people's consciousness. They are interested in vulgar things, just as they can't figure out the capacity of fou bells.
Chinese PinYin : èr fǒu zhōng huò
Two doubts
be cheated but unable to talk about it for one reason or another. chī yǎ bā kuī
the words fail to convey the meaning. yán bù dá yì
one 's life has the whereabouts and one 's spirit has its entrustment. ān shēn lì mìng