have two minds
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is è RS ā NQ í y ì, which means that the mind is not specific and capricious. It comes from the notes of Pei Songzhi in the annals of the Three Kingdoms, Yuan Shaozhuan, and quoted from the spring and Autumn Annals of the Han, Jin and Jin Dynasties.
The origin of Idioms
Pei Songzhi's annotation in the annals of the Three Kingdoms, Yuan Shaozhuan, quoted from the spring and Autumn Annals of the Han, Jin and Qing Dynasties: "it was when the outside was to resist the calamity, the inside was to beg for the crime, and there was no amnesty, but Tu ge23 was rebellious."
Idiom usage
It's used as attributive and complement; it's used to describe three minds and two meanings; it's used as an example; it's used to describe three minds and two meanings. The eighty seventh chapter of Eastern Zhou Dynasty annals by Feng Menglong in Ming Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : èr sān qí yì
have two minds
valuable things passed on from the past. diǎn zhāng wén wù
Let the wind and waves rise, sit on the fishing boat. rèn cóng fēng làng qǐ,wěn zuò diào yú chuán
Guessing with bees and butterflies. fēng mí dié cāi