have wide knowledge
Guangjian qiaow é n, a Chinese idiom, means to be knowledgeable. It comes from the tablet of Li Chucai, magistrate of Baiquan County.
Idiom explanation
Qia: Guangbo. You can see a lot, but you can hear a lot.
The origin of Idioms
Yang Jiong of the Tang Dynasty wrote in the tablet of Li Chucai, the magistrate of Baiquan County: "a man of great talent and strong thinking, plays nine tunes and eight tones, sees and hears widely, and recites three cases in five years."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: widely heard and widely seen antonym: obscure
Idiom usage
It refers to people's knowledge. In the book of historical records written by Hu Yinglin in Ming Dynasty, it is said that there are hundreds of people who have the same name in Tang Dynasty, and they are recorded according to their own type, which is regarded as the help of the public
Chinese PinYin : guǎng jiàn qià wén
have wide knowledge
make up a deficiency by the surplus. jué cháng xù duǎn
No matter what you do, you don't get much wisdom. bù jīng yī shì,bù zhǎng yī zhì
Seeing is better than hearing. ěr wén bù rú miàn jiàn
Engrave the skin and carve out the bone. míng fū lòu gǔ