assiduously practice calligraphy
Linchi xueshu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l í NCH í Xu é sh ū, which means practicing calligraphy assiduously. It comes from the biography of Zhang Zhi in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
Notes on Idioms
Lin: close to; pool: inkstone pool; calligraphy: calligraphy.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Zhang Zhi in the later Han Dynasty: "you are good at cursive script. You should learn from Cui and Du. You should write and then practice the clothing and silk of your family. The water is black when linchi studies. "
Idiom usage
It refers to studying calligraphy assiduously. I'm not willing to learn from him. I'm ugly and clumsy. I'm not good at trying. Zhang Dai's family biography in Ming Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : lín chí xué shū
assiduously practice calligraphy
hear readily without comprehending what is heard. ěr shí zhī tán
A snake wants to swallow an elephant. shé yù tūn xiàng
birds of a feather flock together. rén yǐ qún fēn