not hurt the important essentials
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ú sh à NGD à y à. Although the meaning has influence, it has no harm to the main aspects. From the beautiful name of "king of fruit".
Notes on Idioms
Daya: one of the constituent parts of the book of songs, which refers to elegant and upright, elegant and generous.
The origin of Idioms
Qin Mu's "the beautiful name of the king of fruit" said: "it's sweet, but also has its own characteristics. Some are as sweet as honey, some are slightly sweet in the sweet," harmless "and sour."
Idiom usage
The verb object type is used as predicate and attributive with derogatory meaning. (1) Mao Jike's preface to the present world in Qing Dynasty: "i.e. anger, confusion and drowning, trace involving wind and stab, so as not to hurt Daya." (2) Chapter 25 of Wu Jianren's twenty years of witnessing the strange situation in Qing Dynasty: "it's harmless to be a stubborn person like this without asking him whether he is true or not. As for those who talk about misfortunes and blessings in vain, it's no good." (3) Qin Mu's "the beautiful name of the" king of fruit "is sweet and has its own characteristics. Some of them are as sweet as honey, and some of them are slightly sour.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: irrelevant to the overall situation, no foot attached to the teeth [antonym]: fundamental damage, vital damage
Chinese PinYin : wú shāng dà yǎ
not hurt the important essentials
The same way and the same meaning. dào tóng yì hé
barter the trunk for the branches. qù běn jiù mò
Hide the edge and keep the edge. cáng fēng liǎn ruì