draw a forced analogy
Far fetched, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is Qi ā nqi ǎ NGF ù Hu ì, which means to say that there is no certain meaning of things, also refers to the unrelated things forced together, confused. It comes from the flower of the evil sea written by Zeng Pu in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
It is a combination; it is used as predicate, attributive and adverbial; it has a derogatory meaning; it refers to confusion. It seems that the ancient Greek philosophers did not know the meaning of this, but later they said it was true. (Lu Xun's grave: history of man)
The origin of Idioms
The 11th chapter of Zeng Pu's Nie Hai Hua in the Qing Dynasty: "the later Confucianists are far fetched and take great pains. I don't know it's all because the ancient and modern learning is not clear."
Chinese PinYin : qiān qiáng fù huì
draw a forced analogy
one 's voice is like a great bell. shēng rú hóng zhōng
the paper is too short to describe one 's deep feeling. qíng cháng zhǐ duǎn
pour exhortations into sb . 's ear. ěr tí miàn mìng