Hair in one's hair
It's a Chinese idiom, which means that it's not as good as wearing a hat, but only on the neck. I'm in a hurry to help. It's from Mencius, under the leaves.
explain
It is said that it is not enough to tie the hair and crown, but only tie the tassel to the neck. I'm in a hurry to help.
Idioms and allusions
1. Mencius · lilouxia: "today there are people in the same room who fight to save them, although they can be saved by sending a Ying crown." How can the people of Huaiyang worry about the difficulties of their fortune! Answer to the Duke of Wu Guifang in Ming Dynasty by Zhang Juzheng
Discrimination of words
Usage: used as attributive or adverbial to describe a person's untidy clothes. English Translation: rescue body in a hurry degree of common use: secularity emotional color: commendatory words grammatical usage: attributive, adverbial; describe people's untidy attire idiom structure: combination generation time: Ancient
Chinese PinYin : pī fā yīng guàn
Hair in one's hair
become a custom through long time usage. xiāng yán chéng xí
like throwing away an old sandal. rú qì bì xǐ