openings to exploit
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k ě ch é ngzh ī x ì, which means weakness and gap that can be used. It comes from the book of the upper emperor on Northern Affairs written by Chao Buzhi of Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Chao Buzhi of the Song Dynasty wrote in the book on the Northern Affairs of the upper Emperor: "when it is, there is a gap to take advantage of, but China does not take it."
Idiom usage
Example: Chapter 14 of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty: "Xiao Pei was not a place to live for a long time. It's too late to repent if we don't take what Xuzhou has today. " According to Wang Zaijin's three dynasties record of Liao affairs - yuan Keli's report on Liu AI TA affairs in Ming Dynasty: "I heard that Liu Xingren and Wang Bing had been killed by the slaves, but my heart was broken and my wings were cut. All the puppet generals were in danger. This gap can be taken advantage of."
Chinese PinYin : kě chéng zhī xì
openings to exploit
The top is not enough, the bottom is more than the bottom. shàng fāng bù zú,xià bǐ yǒu yú
as the arm directing the fingers -- command with ease as one wishes. rú bì shǐ zhǐ
regard honour and riches as floating clouds. fù guì fú yún
hold in one 's horse near a precipice. lín yá lè mǎ
feign madness and act like an idiot. zhuāng fēng mài shǎ
resplendent with variegated coloration. wǔ guāng shí sè