have nothing to do
Do nothing, Chinese idiom, Pinyin for w ú Su ǒì sh ì, meaning to do nothing when idle. From the popular romance of the Republic of China.
Idiom explanation
Everything: the former "thing" is a verb, doing; the latter "thing" is a noun, doing. Do nothing when you are idle!
The origin of Idioms
In the first five chapters of the popular romance of the Republic of China written by Cai Dongfan and Xu Xun's father, "under the command of the president, under the advice of the committee members, the town (whole) has nothing to do during the day, which is like a tumor."
Idiom usage
The verb object type is used as predicate, attributive and adverbial with derogatory meaning.
Chinese PinYin : wú suǒ shì shì
have nothing to do
quick-fried dragon and roasted phoenix. pēng lóng páo fèng
a fish leaping over the dragon gate -- have passed a competitive examination. yú shēng lóng mén
yang yuhuan was plump while zhao feiyan was skinny -- beautiful women , each of whom is attractive in her own way. huán féi yàn shòu
chief criminal and great enemy. yuán è dà jiān
be never seen without a book in hand. shǒu bù shì juàn