very small portion of sth.
Taicang Gaomi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t à IC à NGT í m à, Taicang: the granary of the ancient capital; Gaomi: Xiaomi. A grain of millet in a big granary means that people and things are extremely small in the vast universe. It is used to describe the insignificance of people. From Chuang Tzu autumn water.
The origin of Idioms
It is said in Chuang Tzu's autumn water: "the four seas are between heaven and earth, not like the sky in daze? If China is at home, isn't it as if rice is at Dacang? " Bai Juyi of Tang Dynasty wrote in his collection of Bai's Changqing and his poems of musing for returning home: "in the centenary of life, heaven and earth are temporarily in shape; Taicang is a mountain of rice, and the sea is a duckweed."
Analysis of Idioms
A drop in the ocean a drop in the ocean a drop in the ocean a drop in the ocean a drop in the ocean a drop in the ocean a drop in the ocean a drop in the ocean a drop in the ocean a drop in the ocean a drop in the ocean a drop in the ocean a drop in the Ocean
Idiom usage
Compared with other silent comrades, what I've done is nothing more than too much, so I don't have to worry about it.
Chinese PinYin : tài cāng tí mǐ
very small portion of sth.
pop one 's head in and look about. tàn tóu tàn nǎo