stumble along
Faltering, a Chinese idiom, is pronounced Li à ngli à nqi à nqi à ng, which refers to the appearance of walking unsteadily and stumbling. From the outlaws of the marsh.
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: walking fast, steady, steady. Stagger, stagger, stagger
The origin of Idioms
The fourth chapter of Water Margin written by Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty: "the head is heavy and the feet are light, the eyes are red to the moon, the face is red; the front is close and the back is backward, and the East and the West are crooked while the wind is clear. Staggering up the mountain, like a crane in the wind; swinging back to the temple, like a turtle out of the water. "
Idiom usage
To describe the way of walking. Because he is suffering from poliomyelitis, he is on his way. 2. He ~, crawling home (Jin Bo's blind child and his shadow) 3. Looking at the uncle, he must be drunk. Because of his leg disease since childhood, he walked unsteadily. (5) the sixth volume of Ming Feng Menglong's a general warning to the world: "Yu Liang went to take advantage of it and ate some bowls of hungry wine. Until late in the day, when he got drunk and faltered, he went to sun Po's shop and fell asleep 6. Chapter 80 of the romance of the Sui and Tang Dynasties: "it's evening for Guozhen to come out of the gate and stagger to the neighborhood." 7. Chapter 32 of Jingzhong yuezhuan: "stand up, stagger and walk down the hall."
Chinese PinYin : liàng liàng qiàng qiàng
stumble along
be soaked in a dark liquid without becoming back. niè ér bù zī