Seven sons and eight sons in law
Seven sons and eight sons in law, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q ī Z ǐ B ā x ù, which means to describe many sons and sons in law. It comes from the biography of Guo Ziyi in the old book of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Guo Ziyi in the old book of the Tang Dynasty, there were seven sons and eight sons in law in the Tang Dynasty, all of whom were important officials in the imperial court.
Analysis of Idioms
Seven sons and eight sons in law
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; of children. There is no ~, only one child in my family. How can I get there? The story of pipa, forced by Cai Gong, written by Gao Ming of Ming Dynasty.
Chinese PinYin : qī zǐ bā xù
Seven sons and eight sons in law
cannot put the responsibility on others. fēi yì rén rèn
Love the hair but not the fur. ài máo fǎn qiú
a heap of musty old books or papers. gù zhǐ duī
attend to trifles to the neglect of essentials. shě běn zhú mò