Seven holes and eight holes
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is Q ī Chu ā NGB ā K ǒ ng, which means there are many holes. It refers to being heavily in debt economically. From the lamp on the wrong road.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 66 of the light on the wrong road by Li Lvyuan in Qing Dynasty: "as the saying goes," it's better to have nothing than a good account. " One day in my body, one day in my heart, I wish I could cut it all together. Recently, I've been in a dilemma. It's hard for me to finish it all at once. "
Idiom usage
United; of heavily in debt.
Chinese PinYin : qī chuāng bā kǒng
Seven holes and eight holes
extort and levy illegal taxes. bào liǎn héng zhēng