argue back and forth and cannot agree
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ù s 庸 NGF ē NY ú n, which means that many people discuss a certain issue together and can't decide which opinion is right. It comes from the biography of Cao Bao in the book of the later Han Dynasty and the biography of Feng Yan in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Gathering: to argue among the masses; diverse: numerous and disorderly.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Cao Bao in the book of the later Han Dynasty, there is a saying: "if you make a sacrifice, you can't make it in three years." The house of rites is called the gathering of lawsuits. There are doubts and differences between each other. I can't write about them. " In the second biography of Feng Yan in the book of the later Han Dynasty, it is said that "when we talk about the general theory of sages and philosophers, we have different memories of happiness."
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: one voice, one voice, one voice
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; predicate, object, adverbial; commendatory.
Chinese PinYin : jù sòng fēn yún
argue back and forth and cannot agree
a myriad of stars surround the moon. zhòng xīng pěng yuè
make good omissions and deficiencies. shí yí bǔ quē