I'll dig in the ice
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ru ì Z á ob ī NGT à n, which means things are sharply opposed and incompatible. It comes from Ming Sheng of Qing Dynasty's "Discussion on seventeen histories · Southern history in Song Dynasty, Qi and Liang Dynasty, Chen Shu 12 · Gu Huan's discussion on Taoism and Buddhism".
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences
The origin of Idioms
According to Ming Sheng of the Qing Dynasty's discussion on the seventeen histories, the southern history and the song, Qi, Liang, Chen Shu, and the twelfth Gu Huan's discussion on the two schools of Taoism and Buddhism, it is quite true that the Taoist Scriptures quoted by Yu Wei Huan are correct, and Laozi is the Buddha, so there are no two ways But with my Confucianists, it's just like a peg in a peg in an iceberg. "
Idiom explanation
It refers to the sharp opposition and incompatibility of things. See also square and circle.
Chinese PinYin : ruì záo bīng tàn
I'll dig in the ice