Rabbit horn and ox wing
Rabbit horn and ox wing, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ù Ji ǎ oni ú y ì, which means that the rabbit does not have horns and the ox does not have wings, so it is unreasonable to use it as a metaphor. It comes from Mingjian, a treatise on national heritage.
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Binglin's "on the balance of national heritage · Mingjian" said: "if it is, the outcome of the beginning is unknown, that is to say, all theories are like a rabbit's horn and a bull's wing."
Analysis of Idioms
Wu Bai Ma Jiao
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences. In today's society, there are many excuses, some of which are just like a rabbit's horn and a bull's wing.
Chinese PinYin : tù jiǎo niú yì
Rabbit horn and ox wing
a talent is useless when secluded. qián jiāo kùn fèng
the bee acts as a go-between and the butterfly as an agent. fēng méi dié shǐ