put the trivial above the important
In Chinese idioms, Pinyin is Q ī ngzh ò NGD à ozh ì, which means that the important and unimportant are reversed. It comes from the collection of the best words: on Han Yu's improper division of the third.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Anshi, Song Dynasty, wrote a collection of the best words: on the improper third division of Han Yu's difference: "the inversion of the heavy and the heavy is harmful to the political system."
Idiom usage
It means putting the cart before the horse. It's different to write articles and make speeches. It's designed to influence people, but our comrades are free to do so. This is called the inversion of importance. Mao Zedong's eight part opposition
Chinese PinYin : qīng zhòng dào zhì
put the trivial above the important
spout a lot of erroneous opinions. dà fā miù lùn
Stop the mountain and stop the river. shān zhǐ chuān xíng
The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak. xīn yǒu yú ér lì bù zú
be devoid of any sense of shame. tián bù zhī xiū
mountains and seas are whistling. shān hū hǎi xiào
true skill and genuine knowledge. zhēn cái shí xué
Time is short and time is full. shí chù jǔ yíng