disunity
Li Xin Li De, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l í x ī NL í D é, which means that ideas are not unified and beliefs are not consistent. I don't have one mind. From the book of history, Tai Shi Zhong.
Idiom explanation
Heart, Virtue: heart. There is no unity of ideas and beliefs. I don't have one mind.
The origin of Idioms
According to the book of history, Tai Shi Zhong: "there are hundreds of millions of Yi people who have been accepted by Zhou, who are separated from their hearts and morals."
Idiom usage
It means not united
Examples
Li people, misfortunes happen. The 17th chapter of the romance of Fengshen by Xu Zhonglin in Ming Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : lí xīn lí dé
disunity
the path winds along mountain ridges. fēng huí lù zhuǎn
the students surpass the teacher. bīng hán yú shuǐ
There is no mending of the cloth. wéi bó bù xiū
difficult to guess or comprehend. xuán miào mò cè