a heap of musty old books or papers
Old paper pile, Chinese vocabulary.
Pinyin: G ù zh ǐ Du ī
It generally refers to many old books and materials; it also refers to ancient books.
derogatory sense.
Entry
a heap of musty old books or papers
Pinyin
gùzhǐduī
english
Citation explanation
It generally refers to many old books and materials; it also refers to ancient books. In a derogatory sense, the third one of Zhu Xi's answer to Lu Zi's covenant in Song Dynasty: "how can we always indulge in the pile of old paper, so that we can forget the past after losing our spirit, and we can call it learning?" The sixth volume of Suiyuan Shihua written by Yuan Mei in Qing Dynasty: "I tasted the official system of Archaeology and searched the ancient books. However, after two months, I occasionally wrote a poem. I felt that my mind was stagnant and I wanted to seek it from the pile of old papers." "Five Lantern Festival yuan · ancient spirit praises Zen master": "when will the paper come out? In these piles of old papers, there is an inexhaustible treasure of knowledge. " Gao Xie's "Suohuang Binhong's seal management first sent a poem": "I also know the history of books, so I want to die in the pile of paper." Wen Yiduo's book 3 to Mr. Zang Kejia: "there are more than one kind of people who can make a living in the pile of old paper you often curse, just as there is not only one kind of life in the pile of old paper." Mao Zedong's "transforming our learning": "some people have no knowledge of their own things, so there are Greek and foreign stories left. They are also pitifully picked up from foreign old papers." (check, check)
Chinese PinYin : gù zhǐ duī
a heap of musty old books or papers
just listen to without taking it seriously. gū wàng tīng zhī
sincere words and earnest wishes. yǔ zhòng xīn chén
a myriad of stars surround the moon. zhòng xīng pěng yuè
dense forests in the deep mountains. shēn shān mì lín