Dragonflies shake stone pillars
Dragonfly shaking stone pillar is a Chinese idiom, the pronunciation is Q ī NGT í NGH à NSH í zh ù, which means that it is a metaphor to overstep one's ability.
explain
It's also like being still.
source
The 42nd chapter of journey to the west by Wu Chengen of Ming Dynasty: "this traveler is going to get the bottle. Alas, I don't want to move him. It's like a dragonfly shaking a stone pillar. How could it shake half a cent? "
Chapter 77 of three chivalrous men and five righteousness by Qing Shi Yukun: push up, thinking that you can push the northern chivalry out. Who knows, it's like a dragonfly shaking a stone pillar, never moving again.
usage
As an object or attributive
Chinese PinYin : qīng tíng hàn shí zhù
Dragonflies shake stone pillars
manoeuvre among political groups. bǎi hé zòng héng
do or think the same without prior consulation. bù qī ér tóng