Dried up fish
A Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h é zh é K ū y ú, which means to refer to a person in urgent need of help. It's the same as "the frog of dryness". The source is "feiwan Ji · lianrutuo Nan".
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Jing of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the story of feiwan · pitying for rutuonan: "boasting a little bit of lingxire, the dried up fish bathe in Haobo."
Idiom usage
But one can't wait for the arrival of the ideal world with hunger. At least one has to leave a little breath, just as ~, the water of the rising bucket. Lu Xun's "how is the tomb after Nora left"
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: dry track poor scale, dry track poor fish, dry frog Antonyms: survival from nowhere
Chinese PinYin : hé zhé kū yú
Dried up fish
It is better to know than to know. qiǎng bù zhī yǐ wéi zhī
be completely at a loss as in a fog. duò yún wù zhōng
not willing to listen to advice. shī xīn zì yòng
adopt good advice from all quarters. bó cǎi zhòng yì
Flies follow the tail of a steed and fly thousands of miles. yíng fù jì wěi ér zhì qiān lǐ