scholars scorn each other
The Chinese idiom, w é NR é nxi ā ngq ī ng, means that scholars look down on each other. It comes from the treatise on classics by Cao Pi, Wei of the Three Kingdoms.
The origin of Idioms
Since ancient times, scholars despise each other. Fu Yi to Ban Gu, Bo Zhonger between. But Gu Xiaozhi and his younger brother Chao wrote a book, saying: Zhi "Wu Zhong can write for the history of Lantai, so he can't write for himself." Madame is good at seeing herself. However, literature is not a whole, and it is rare to be good. It is because each of them has his own strong points, and each of them is light and short. Li language said: "home has a broom, enjoy the gold." This is the trouble that you don't see. Since ancient times, scholars despise each other. Fu Yi to Ban Gu, Bo Zhonger between. But Gu Xiaozhi and his younger brother Chao wrote a book and said, "Wu Zhong's ability to write for the history of Lantai order is his ability to write for himself." Madame is good at seeing herself. However, literature is not a whole, and it is rare to be good. It is because each of them has his own strong points, and each of them is light and short. Li language said: "home has a broom, enjoy the gold." This is the trouble that you don't see. Three Kingdoms · Wei · Cao Pi's "Treatise on classics · thesis"
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; as subject, object and attribute; with derogatory meaning.
Chinese PinYin : wén rén xiāng qīng
scholars scorn each other
the tenth , eleventh and twelfth months of the lunar year. shí dōng là yuè
keep preceding promise in mind. jiǔ yāo bù wàng