hands and feet are tied together
Si Ma Zan Ti, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ì m ǎ Cu á NT í, which means two hands and two feet are tied together. From journey to the West.
The origin of Idioms
The 75th chapter of journey to the West written by Wu Chengen of Ming Dynasty: "call out:" little ones, take the rope! " The leaders took the ropes. The three monsters overturned the walker and tied him up. When they took off their clothes, they were full of Bi Ma Wen. "
Idiom usage
Complex sentence; predicate, object, clause; derogatory. The father and daughter took care of the lamp, and together they washed and stripped the clothes of sun Gao and Xue Bao, who were in the Yamen. The 74th chapter of Dangkou Zhi by Yu Wanchun in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : sì mǎ cuán tí
hands and feet are tied together
To be observant is not to be paid. míng chá qiū háo,bù jiàn yú xīn
A moth that grows up by accumulating errors. jī é chéng dù
Golden rules and jade sentences. jīn zhāng yù jù