homeless
Homeless, Chinese idiom,
Pinyin is: W ú Ji ā K ě Gu ī,
There is no home to return to.
idiom
homeless
Pinyin
wújiākěguī
Citation explanation
There is no home to go back to. Refers to displacement. In Chapter 11 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty, Cao Cao was shocked by the news and said, "Yanzhou has lost something, which makes me homeless. I have to make an urgent plan for it." The 25th book of Yu He Ji written by Mei Dingzuo in Ming Dynasty: "I am homeless. On this day, the master will sit up and salute his disciples. Please give me the name of the Dharma. "Ling Mengchu of Ming Dynasty, Volume 22 of" the surprise of making a case at the first carving ":" when the monk saw him, he had nothing to do with him, so he gradually ignored him and refused to stay with him. If you want to go back to your hometown, you will be homeless. " Chu people in the Qing Dynasty won the fourth and third chapter of the romance of the Sui and Tang Dynasties: "although you are a unique family, you only make Shan Tong homeless." Chapter 30 of Li Baojia's Officialdom: what's more, if there is no help from inside and outside, once it is abolished and returned to the countryside, there is no reason not to be exiled. Guo Moruo's "revolutionary spring and Autumn Annals" 28: "you set fire outside the gate of wusheng, burned down countless families, and made most of the residents homeless." It is also called "having no home to run to". The second time in the biography of heroes and Heroines: "although there are several kinds of money in my waist, I have no family to run to."
Analysis of Idioms
To live and work in peace and contentment
Idiom usage
After the war, people were homeless.
Chinese PinYin : wú jiā kě guī
homeless
raise one 's arm in a call for action. zhèn bì yī hū
feel irreconcilable hatred for sb. bù gòng dài tiān
present a false appearance of peace and prosperity. fěn shì tài píng
No flow, no flow, no flow. bù sāi bù liú,bù zhǐ bù xíng