Ten lines at a glance
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is m ù Xi à sh í h á ng, which means reading books very fast. It comes from the popular novel of Beijing - Ao Xianggong.
The origin of Idioms
"A prime minister's surname is Wang Anshi, and he is from Linchuan. He has ten lines and ten thousand books. "
Analysis of Idioms
Ten lines at a glance
Idiom usage
It refers to reading. The fourth volume of Ming Feng Menglong's a warning to the world: "this man ~, the book is very poor."
Chinese PinYin : mù xià shí háng
Ten lines at a glance
Seeing things but not people. jiàn wù bù jiàn rén
two families are linked up through marriage. èr xìng zhī hǎo
range upon range of mountains. chóng luán dié yǎn
a scene of desolation after a plague when the population is decimated. shí shì jiǔ kōng
Hold the snake and ride the tiger. wò shé qí hǔ
Root dentition and dislocation. gēn yá pán cuò