Jin Huiwen frog
Jin Huiwen frog is a Chinese idiom, the basic meaning of which is to refer to ignorance.
Idiom information
[usage] used as object and attribute; refers to ignorance. [structure] subject predicate pattern [time] ancient times [rhyme words] startled and happy, seven seven or seven eight, no sanding in the eyes, water and moon mirror, lightning stroke on the wall, literary style, crackling, pulling, Lu Wuchang, starting from scratch
The origin of Idioms
Is this official? Private? Huidi Ji in the book of Jin: Emperor Huidi of Jin was fatuous and ignorant. When he heard the sound of frogs in the forest garden of China, he said that the world was in chaos, and the people starved to death. He said, "why don't you eat minced meat?"
Idiom story
In the period of Jin Dynasty, Emperor Hui of Jin Dynasty was very fatuous and ignorant. When he heard the sound of frogs in Hualin garden, he asked, "are they calling this for the sake of the country or for their own sake?" Later, the world was in chaos, and many people starved to death. When officials went to court, they reported the situation to him. Huidi even said why they didn't eat meat? All officials can't laugh or cry.
Examples of Idioms
Envy kill that know the blessing in disguise, can laugh at him to ask public and private Jin Huiwen frog. The first discount of Prince yuan's a lost journey to Taoyuan.
Chinese PinYin : jìn huì wén wā
Jin Huiwen frog
as incompatible as ice and charcoal. bīng tàn bù tóu