new problems crop up unexpectedly
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji é w à sh à ngzhi à, which means that branches should not be born where they should be. It means that there is a new problem in addition to the original problem. It means that obstacles are deliberately set up to make the problem can not be solved smoothly. From the answer to Lu Fang Zi Yue (September 13).
The origin of Idioms
According to Zhu Xi's answer to Lu Fangzi's appointment (September 13), "it's useless to read ten thousand volumes of books even if the explanation comes from the words and the branch comes from the festival."
Idiom usage
It's more formal; it's a predicate, an object, an attribute; it's a derogatory example. What's more, it's a gossip. How can he say it. Yuan · Yang Xianzhi's xiaoxiangyu's second break and Yuan · Gao Maoqing's children's reunion's fourth break: "don't blame him for his insidious thorns in the mud, he didn't have a way out of the corner."
Analysis of Idioms
Xiehouyu: one lawsuit, two trials; eleven fingers
Idioms and allusions
Zhu Xi, an agent scholar in Song Dynasty, spent most of his life lecturing and writing books. He thought that reading should be based on the ideological content and logical reasoning of the article, and not on other issues. Lu ziyue, Lu Zuqian's younger brother, disagreed with this view. Zhu Xi thought that reading should not be blocked by left and right, and there was no need to cause more trouble to avoid extraneous matters.
Chinese PinYin : jié wài shēng zhī
new problems crop up unexpectedly
stand head and shoulders above others. zhuó lì jī qún
remarkable in talent and quick in movement. gāo cái jié zú
be in the van of one 's officers and men. shēn xiān shì zhòng
The best use lies in one heart. yùn yòng zhī miào,zài yú yī xīn
do according to one's ability. liàng lì ér xíng
while water can carry a boat , it can also overturn it. zài zhōu fù zhōu