Barren cattle and porpoises
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j í Ni ú L é it ú n, which means a weak nation or country. It comes from Liang Qichao's biography of Gusu, the patriot of Hungarian Gali in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As an object; of a weak nation or country
The origin of Idioms
Liang Qichao's biography of gusushi, the patriot of Hungarian and Gali in the Qing Dynasty: "the dulanswa people, the Sassoon people, and so on, also became ashes along with the Magoya people they were hostile to. Poor cattle and poor porpoises, sit and wait to be cut. "
Idiom explanation
Barren: barren; Lean: sick. Lean cattle and pigs. It refers to a weak nation or country.
Chinese PinYin : jí niú léi tún
Barren cattle and porpoises
indulge in the wildest fantasy. miù xiǎng tiān kāi
have a keen insight into matters. dòng zhōng kěn qìng