have more hands than needed
The Chinese idiom R é NF ú y ú sh í originally refers to a person's ability exceeding his salary. There are too many people in the post metaphor to meet the needs of the work. From the book of rites · Fang Ji.
The origin of Idioms
Fang Ji in the book of Rites: "therefore, a gentleman would rather make his food more than his food."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] ten sheep nine herds, idle and idle [antonym] make the best of one's talents, each has his own place [allegorical sayings] lead a sheep family to work [lantern club] water homework
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; predicate, attribute, object; derogatory
Chinese PinYin : rén fú yú shí
have more hands than needed
as if sitting in the clouds and mists. rú zuò yún wù
have sufficient grounds for one 's views. chí zhī yǒu gù
there 's no making without breaking. bù può bù lì