A thousand push and ten thousand resistance
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi ā NTU ī w à NZ ǔ, which describes all kinds of refusal. It comes from Yuan Ke Danqiu's the story of jingchai, the maidservant.
The definition of a thousand resistances
Push: push and drag. Block: block. Push and pull repeatedly. It describes all kinds of refusals and refusals. Source: Yuan Ke Danqiu's Jing Chai Ji: blame maidservant: "when Deng Shangshu talked about marriage, he pushed and resisted everything. When he saw that Wang Taishou was willing, he ignored the Five Canons and three cardinal guides." example: the two children, seeing that they didn't eat, had to take the plate and turn back to their room. Chapter 24 of a journey to the west by Wu Chengen of Ming Dynasty. synonym: push three to block four antonym: be responsible
Idiom information
Idiom explanation: push: push and pull. Block: block. Push and pull repeatedly. It describes all kinds of refusals and refusals. idiom example: Ling Mengchu of the Ming Dynasty, Volume 9 of the second moment of surprise: "but the book of history goes back on its promise, and there is a great deal of resistance." degree of common use: General emotional color: commendatory words grammatical usage: as predicate, object, adverbial; used to push idiom structure: combined generation time: Ancient
Chinese PinYin : qiān tuī wàn zǔ
A thousand push and ten thousand resistance
resign from office and live in seclusion. guà guān guī qù
If you don't ask for anything, you'll find it. háo mò bù zhā,jiāng xún fǔ kē