The bottle is broken
Pinyin is p í ngch é NZ ā nzh é, a Chinese idiom. It means that the bottom of the bottle is hard to find and the hairpin is hard to pick up. From the bottom of the well.
The origin of Idioms
Tang Bai Juyi's poem "well bottom lead silver vase" says: "well bottom lead silver vase, silver vase want to be on silk rope absolutely; stone grinding jade hairpin, jade hairpin want to be central fold. I know what I can do, just like I'm leaving you now. "
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: bottle drop and hairpin fold; antonym: broken mirror reunion
Idiom usage
It refers to the separation of men and women. An example is that if the vase is sunk and the hairpin is folded, the jade will return and the Pearl will return. A new story about jiandeng: biography of Cuicui
Chinese PinYin : píng chén zān zhé
The bottle is broken
The rest of the chicken and the porpoise. jī tún zhī xī