It's in the bag
In the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is n á NGL ò uch ǔ zh ō ng, which means that the actual interests are not flowing out. It comes from the Secretary of Wen Xin Diao Long by Liang and Liu Xie of the Southern Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: in storage
The origin of Idioms
Secretary of Wen Xin Diao Long, written by Liang and Liu Xie in the Southern Dynasty: "a proverb is a straight word." As Duke Zou Lu said, "if you don't have enough money, it's all of your own kind."
Idiom explanation
It is often used to refer to the fact that there is no outflow of actual benefits. It is the same as "in the bag".
Chinese PinYin : náng lòu chǔ zhōng
It's in the bag
rove among flowers and willows -- visit places brothels. xún huā wèn liǔ
decision making through operations research. yùn chóu jué suàn
most sagacious and intelligent. zhì shèng zhì míng
Huaitangerine as trifoliate orange. huái jú wéi zhǐ
Cast in bronze and cast in iron. tóng zhù tiě jiāo
The road and the road tie each other. dào jìn xiāng zhěn
little drops of water make an ocean. jī shuǐ chéng yuān