spit out a mouthful in the middle of eating and bind up one 's hair in the midst of a bath in order to see visitors
Tuyu chufa, a Chinese idiom, is t ǔ B ǔ Zhu ō f ā in pinyin, which means to compare worrying and busy in order to attract talents. It's from the second twenty-nine days of reply.
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu, Tang Dynasty, wrote in his book "Fu Shang Shu after 29 days": "although it can't be like the Duke of Zhou, it's better to lead it forward. It's better to observe the reason and go away. It's better not to be silent."
Idiom usage
It refers to cherishing talents.
Chinese PinYin : tǔ bǔ zhuō fā
spit out a mouthful in the middle of eating and bind up one 's hair in the midst of a bath in order to see visitors
give full play to one 's imagination. hú cāi luàn xiǎng
throw away everything when fleeing. diū kuī xiè jiǎ
vow to annihilate the rebels. kòu jí zhōng liú
Forefathers slip, posterity slip. qián rén shī jiǎo,hòu rén bǎ huá
layer upon layer of peaks and knolls. céng luán dié zhàng