things very much alike
Lu weizhizheng, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ǔ w è izh ī zh è ng, meaning the same or similar situation. From the Analects of Confucius · Zilu.
The origin of Idioms
In the Analects of Confucius, Zilu: "the government of Lu Wei is brothers." Lu was the vassal state of Duke Zhou in the Zhou Dynasty, while Wei was the vassal state of Uncle Kang, the younger brother of Duke Zhou. The political situation of the two countries is similar to that of brothers.
Idiom usage
Everyone is fighting for the publishing office. "If you have milk, you'll be a mother." this led to the funny phenomenon of engaging in cultural movements under the cultural bandits' envoys. This kind of farce and the so-called "government and people jointly run" are actually ~. ——Guo Moruo's from the typical
Chinese PinYin : lǔ wèi zhī zhèng
things very much alike
sacrifice the interests of the country to pay respect to the privileged. bài ēn sī shì
strategically located places. bǎi èr shān chuān
dense forests in the deep mountains. shēn shān mì lín
be a brilliant man of wide learning. bó xué duō cái
There is no ivory in a dog's mouth. gǒu kǒu lǐ shēng bù chū xiàng yá
keep on repeating at great length. lián piān lèi cè
make up deficits and increase surpluses. niǔ kuī zēng yíng