Fetuses and turbid bones
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f á NT ā izhu ó g ǔ, which means ordinary and mediocre people in the world. From village music hall.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: common people and common bones
The origin of Idioms
The first fold of "village music hall" written by Wu Mingshi in Yuan Dynasty: "it's hard for us to see each other, but it's hard for us to live together."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it refers to a mediocre person. Lu Yan's poem "water dragon chant" in Tang Dynasty: "the alchemy elixir has been changed, the mortal's womb is turbid, the wheel is free, and three kinds of bitterness are applied." The third fold of Ren Fengzi written by Ma Zhiyuan in Yuan Dynasty: "it is the three inch Yuan Yang Qi that runs through the mortal foetus and turbid bones and makes the flesh look stupid." Chapter 4 of outlaws of the Marsh: "Yang Lin said:" I'm afraid that my younger brother is mortal, not as good as his elder brother. " It is also called "mortal turbid body". The first book of Zhang Tianshi written by Wu Changling in Yuan Dynasty: "how dare you accompany a fairy when you read Xiaosheng's mortal body?" master, I don't know much about these alchemy methods. The third discount of the meeting of immortals by Zhu Youdun in Ming Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : fán tāi zhuó gǔ
Fetuses and turbid bones
a single spark can start a prairie fire. xīng huǒ liáo yuán
It's not polite to come but not to go. lái ér bù wǎng fēi lǐ yě
to compose poems while holding the lance horizontally in the saddle. héng shuò fù shī
rank , success , fame and riches. gōng míng fù guì