treasure a thing by wrapping it up carefully
In the spring and Autumn period, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh í x í y ǐ C á ng, which means wrapping things one layer after another. It's a very precious collection. It's the same as "hiding from the enemy.". From the lamp on the wrong road.
Idiom information
Shi: describe more; attack: overlap. It's wrapped up in layers. It's a very precious collection. It's the same as "hiding from the enemy.".
Idiom usage
To collect something with great value
Examples
Since some people said that the earthenware pot unearthed from the ground might be a treasure, Mr. Wang attacked it and refused to show it to others. However, some people said that after the cultural relics unearthed from the ground were handed over to the state, Mr. Wang's heart was filled with 18 buckets to draw water.
The origin of Idioms
The 95th chapter of Li Luyuan's Qiludeng in the Qing Dynasty: "people are competing to pass money, and they attack Tibet."
Chinese PinYin : shí xí yǐ cáng
treasure a thing by wrapping it up carefully
be good both in character and scholarship. jīng míng xíng xiū
faithful words grate upon the ear. zhōng yán nì ěr