a multitude of things
Chinese Idioms,
Pinyin: Qi à NT ó UW à nx à,
Explanation: it refers to the beginning of things. There are many clues. It also describes things as complicated and chaotic.
It comes from the order of self examination written by Cao Zhi of the Three Kingdoms.
idiom
a multitude of things
Pinyin
qiāntóuwànxù
Citation explanation
Also known as: "a thousand threads.". There are a lot of ideas. It describes the complexity of things. Cao Zhi of the Wei Dynasty of the Three Kingdoms wrote in the order of self examination: "the machine and others are critical, and there are thousands of ideas, but in the end there is no one to speak of." Song Ge Changgeng's poem "meet music forever. The silver moon is desolate": thinking about the past, a thousand things, looking back like a dream. According to Zhu Xi's Zhuzi Yu Lei in Song Dynasty, "human beings are just the four kinds of heart of benevolence, righteousness, propriety and wisdom, such as spring, summer, autumn and winter; there are a lot of thoughts; only these four kinds of heart come out." In Wang Shouren's chuanxilu of the Ming Dynasty, it is said that although there are a lot of things to see and hear about the intercourse between the sun and the moon, is it the popular use of conscience Chapter nine of the story of heroes and Heroines: I have a lot of thoughts, but I am in great difficulty. The third chapter of the biography of the heroes of Lvliang by Ma Feng Xirong: "the more I think about it, the more depressed I am. I have a thousand thoughts and I am in a state of confusion."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms are intricate, intricate and intricate; antonyms are clear at a glance
Idiom usage
He can't talk about it for a moment.
Chinese PinYin : qiān tóu wàn xù
a multitude of things
a person who has superb talent. nán zhōu guān miǎn
Take advantage of the opportunity to attack. fù chéng zhì kòu
failure to put things away properly is inviting theft. màn cáng huì dào
set the snipe and clam at each other and then take advantage of both. zuò shōu yú lì
eloquent and frank in speech. néng yán kuài yǔ
till the seas dry up and the rocks decay. hǎi hé shí làn
Worry about the mountains and the sea. chóu shān mèn hǎi