A man of five carriages
Wucheweisi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ǔ ch ē f ù s ì, which means reading a lot and learning a lot. It comes from Zhuangzi · Tianxia written by Zhuang Zhou of the Warring States period.
The origin of Idioms
Huishi many, its book five cars. Zhuangzi · Tianxia by Zhuang Zhou in the Warring States Period
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] Xuefu wuche [antonym] ignorance [Tongyun CI] tend to be powerful, accumulate time, be depressed and difficult to explain, swallow up the tiger, mother's day, play with things and drown ambition, look no evil, be a scholar of writing, three dynasties and five days, be a scholar of long service
Chinese PinYin : wǔ chē fù sì
A man of five carriages
one sang and the other three joined in. yī chàng sān tàn
enhance agricultural production and economize expenses. qiáng běn jié yòng