Superficial and superficial
Fu Fu Luo Mao, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ù f ū Lu ò m á o, which means that people are idle and have no business to do. From the book of Yan.
The origin of Idioms
Fan Heng's Yan Shu in Jin Dynasty: "Ke Xiao.". Shoot a arrow, brush the spine; another arrow, grind the abdomen. They are all attached to the skin and hair
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. In the autumn of Ding Mao, he lost all the right swans and returned to baimen late. Ling Mengchu, Ming Dynasty
Idiom story
In Jin Dynasty, Jia Jian was good at archery. When liezu heard that his archery was superb, he wanted to test him himself, so he took a cow and put it in Baibu's place and asked Jia Jian to shoot it. Jia Jian said: when he was young, he might not be able to hit the target. Now he is just able to hit the target, so he shoots an arrow, just to brush his back and pass by, and then an arrow sticks to his belly. The third arrow hit the bull's heart.
Chinese PinYin : fù fū luò máo
Superficial and superficial
be ready to write down anything encountered. huái qiān tí qiàn
Be aware of people and the world. jué rén jué shì