A trickle is a river
The idiom, read as Ju ā nju ā Nb ù y ō ng, zh ō NGW é Iji ā NGH é, refers to the small or just budding problems do not pay attention to or correct, will lead to big problems. Idiom: a trickle is not blocked, but a river. If the small current is not blocked, it will eventually merge into a big river. It means that if you don't pay attention to or correct small or budding problems, they will lead to big problems. Source: Wang Su's "Confucius family language · Guanzhou" in the Three Kingdoms period, Wei Dynasty: "a trickle does not stop, but eventually becomes a river, which is continuous, or a net."
Chinese PinYin : juān juān bù yōng,zhōng wéi jiāng hé
A trickle is a river
make endless exorbitant demands on. zhū qiú bù yǐ
promote one 's private interests under the guise of serving the public. jiǎ gōng jì sī
Be envious of fame and ability. jīn míng jì néng
Change one's name into another. dùn míng gǎi zuò
The tree falls, the monkey and the sun scatter. shù dǎo hú sūn sàn