prone
Drag and drop, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h é ngtu à D à ozhu à I, which means to drag with violence. It's from the first time.
Notes on Idioms
Pull: pull hard.
The origin of Idioms
Ling Mengchu of the Ming Dynasty, Volume 34 of "the first time to make a surprise at the carving of a case", said: "all the zaoli people work together to drag down a delicate nun."
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute, adverbial; used in human action. Example: "Yang Qi's life today is in the hands of you people. It's a drag." The third discount of Guan Hanqing's "moon worship Pavilion" in Yuan Dynasty: "in the meantime, I was dragged out of the business house by my Lord, and I was forced to walk on the carriage." The fifth chapter of Lao Can's travel notes: "several messengers dragged them down and pulled them down."
Chinese PinYin : héng tuō dào zhuāi
prone
capable of learning from others ' strong points to offset one 's weakness. shàn shàn cóng cháng
bury oneself in outdated writings. zuàn gù zhǐ duī
The autumn wind sweeps the fallen leaves. qiū fēng sǎo luò yè