Nip at the tip of a coin
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi ā Ji ā NLU ò ch ā o, which means to seize the opportunity to embezzle money. From Lao Sheng er.
The origin of Idioms
The wedge in Yuan Dynasty's Wuhan minister's Lao sheng'er: "one hundred Liang notes with me, my brother-in-law Zhang Lang and I, he has always been a bit pinched, I'll count It's eighty-two notes. "
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: yanguocuo
Idiom usage
We can't do this kind of thing.
Chinese PinYin : qiā jiān luò chāo
Nip at the tip of a coin
not deviating a hair 's breadth. máo fā bù shuǎng
there is no lack of precedents. bù fá xiān lì
vow to annihilate the rebels. kòu jí zhōng liú