Carry five cars in one's stomach
It's an idiom, pronounced f ù Z à IW ǔ ch ē.
explain
It means reading a lot and being knowledgeable.
allusion
Zhuangzi · Tianxia written by Zhuangzi in the Warring States period, Song Dynasty and Zhou Dynasty: "Huishi is in many ways, and its books are five vehicles."
usage
It refers to reading a lot and being knowledgeable
Discrimination of words
Li family boy Lang of Jiangxi Province is a jade emperor with five carriages in his stomach. In Song Dynasty, Yang Wanli's poem to send Li Tongzi back to the West: fzwc: Xuefu wuche; usage: predicate and attributive; metaphor: reading a lot and profound knowledge; degree of common use: rare; emotional color: commendatory words; idiom structure: subject predicate form; generation: ancient times
Chinese PinYin : fù zài wǔ chē
Carry five cars in one's stomach
If you feed a thousand miles, you will be hungry. qiān lǐ kuì liáng,shì yǒu jī sè
numerous tasks remain to be undertaken. bǎi duān dài jǔ