piece together
Piecemeal, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q ī P ī Nb ā C ò u, meaning to put things together; extended to improvise. It's from 20 years of witnessing.
The origin of Idioms
The ninety second chapter of Wu Jianren's twenty years of witnessing the strange situation in the Qing Dynasty: "he has been calculating for a long time, saying that he can scrape it together, but he can barely make it up."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] pieced together, rambled about and [antonym] integrated, impeccable
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. His paper is nothing new. It's all made up of copies from magazines. White newspapers are a problem, printing costs are a problem, that is, the food expenses of the people are all pieced together and barely perfunctory, and the salary is not enough. Chapter 4 of Guo Moruo's Hongbo song Chapter 41 of Li Luyuan's Qiludeng in Qing Dynasty: "my funeral of my mother-in-law is a lifelong event for my family. I don't care about money. What's more, the loom, the flower spinning cart, a box and a bucket table are all pieced together, and they are worth more than 2000 yuan. "
Chinese PinYin : qī pīn bā còu
piece together
an old man enjoys life with no cares. hán yí nòng sūn