meticulous job
Shui Mo Gong, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Shu ǐ m ó g ō NGF ū, which means deep and meticulous work, time-consuming. It comes from Volume 15 of Xing Shi Heng Yan by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Ming Dynasty Feng Menglong's "awakening the world" Volume 15: "today I bumped into a day, and I never met a desirable person. I don't want to hide such wonderful people here. I'll have to use some time to stir him up. I'm not afraid that I won't bite him. "
Idiom usage
First of all, we should use some examples to make them imperceptible, so that they can't engage in anything so that they are not beautiful. A brief history of civilization by Li Baojia in Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] grind a pestle into a needle, grind through an iron inkstone, and [antonym] carelessness and rashness
Chinese PinYin : shuǐ mó gōng fū
meticulous job
look impressive but lack real worth. xū yǒu qí biǎo
A dead letter is a dead letter. sǐ biāo bái chán
Abandon books and donate Swords. qì shū juān jiàn