indirect portrayal
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p á ngji à NC è ch à, which means an image expressed from different angles and sides. It comes from Su Shi of Song Dynasty.
explain
From different angles and aspects of the performance of the image.
allusion
[source] Su Shi, Song Dynasty, wrote in his book the painting of Wu Daozi: "if Daozi draws figures with a lamp, he can see them from side to side in reverse, and multiply and divide them horizontally, obliquely and straightly."
[example] Volume 7 of Suiyuan Shihua written by Yuan Mei of Qing Dynasty: "the wonderful part always comes out from the side. It's not this poem, it's this poem." In Qing Dynasty, Li Yu's "casual notes of leisure, poetry and music, structure": "it's just a line to the end, and there's no feeling for it."
Chinese PinYin : páng jiàn cè chū
indirect portrayal
To teach according to one's ability. liàng néng shòu guān
the reduced territories of a nation after aggression by a foreign power. cán shān shèng shuǐ