vague
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ru ò C ú NRU ò w á ng, which means sometimes to keep in mind, sometimes to forget. It is used to describe if there is something or nothing, which is elusive. From Laozi.
Analysis of Idioms
If you are, if you are not, if you are just, if you are away
Idiom usage
As predicate, attributive and adverbial, it refers to the elusive examples. Later generations are separated from each other by the way of heaven, and their minds are shallow and narrow. Things in the last world are like survival or death. Li Zhi's Shi Gang Ping Yao, three emperors and five emperors, renhuang's family
The origin of Idioms
In Laozi written by Li Er of Chu in the spring and Autumn period, it is said that "when a sergeant hears the Tao, he will do it frequently; when a sergeant hears the Tao, he will live or die; when a corporal hears the Tao, he will laugh."
Chinese PinYin : ruò cún ruò wáng
vague
a large head and big ears -- sign of a prosperous man. féi tóu dà miàn
disburse money in public cause. shū cái zhàng yì
Strong in, strong in. qiáng zhōng gèng yǒu qiáng zhōng shǒu