Eat at home
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w à NGW à é RSH í, which means that the military can eat everywhere without food and grass. It comes from historical records on the first emperor of Qin Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
Looking at the house for food
The origin of Idioms
"On the first emperor of Qin Dynasty in historical records:" however, Chen she, with hundreds of scattered soldiers, shouts with all his might, without bowing and halberd, and with white stilts, looks at the house and eats, and runs across the world. " Sima Zhen Suoyin: "it's said that his soldiers encroached on the world and did not pack grain." According to Dai Mingshi's Fu Lei Lun in the Qing Dynasty, "the officials cut AI Liangmin, and the father, son and brother were killed. Looking at the house and eating, creating a name, there is no sound of chicken and dog for thousands of miles. " It is also called "watching the house for food". "Zhang Liang and Chen pinggai are counsellors, and Jiang Guanzhi is the prime minister in charge of the country. Therefore, those who stand up and shout for food are also able to know the meaning of the former king."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing.
Chinese PinYin : wàng wū ér shí
Eat at home
far away and not within the foreseeable future. yáo yáo wú qī
evade the subject under discussion. wáng gù zuǒ yòu ér yán tā