Mai xiushuli
Mai xiushuli, a Chinese idiom, whose pinyin is m à IXI à sh à L í, comes from the book of songs · Wang Feng · Shuli.
The origin of Idioms
"The book of songs · Wang Feng · Shu Li" says: "the Shu Li is the seedling of the millet. "I'll walk in the mill and shake my heart." "Song Weizi's family" in historical records: "Mai Xiu is getting better and better. He's too cunning to be nice to me. "
Analysis of Idioms
A synonym for millet, wheat and corn
Idiom usage
Examples
There are so many poems, such as the thought of the remnant mountains and rivers and the feeling of ~. In Qing Dynasty, pingbuqing's "xiawai Jixie · Qu huiweng"
Chinese PinYin : mài xiù shǔ lí
Mai xiushuli
find it difficult to tear apart. nán shě nán fēn
evade the subject under discussion. wáng gù zuǒ yòu ér yán tā
stand in the snow to wait upon master cheng respectfully. chéng mén lì xuě
be used to war or fighting. néng zhēng guàn zhàn
give up literature for a military career. qì bǐ cóng róng