impractical view of a bookish person
Chinese idioms, Pinyin is sh ū sh ē ngzhang ī Ji à n, which means the scholars' impractical or inappropriate opinions. It comes from Song Shaobo's record after hearing and seeing.
Idiom usage
As an object; of impractical opinion
Examples
Some of them are difficult to do. After all, scholars' opinions are all on paper. The thirty first chapter of Li Baojia's Officialdom
The origin of Idioms
Shao Bo of the Song Dynasty, Volume I of the record after hearing and seeing: "it's a great expense for those who want to raise troops in this dynasty. If they want to restore the method of putting troops in agriculture, it's a scholar's opinion, which can be said but can't be used."
Idiom explanation
It refers to the unrealistic or untimely opinions of scholars.
Chinese PinYin : shū shēng zhī jiàn
impractical view of a bookish person
blot out the sky and cover up the earth. pū tiān gài dì
regarded as a favour without patting trouble to oneself. shùn shuǐ rén qíng
The stars and frost are moving. xīng shuāng lǚ yí