clumsy in penmanship
Graffiti, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ì Nb ǐ t ú y ā, which means that the figurative characters are poorly written and scribbled. The adjectives are scribbled. Or scribble. Graffiti. It is also often used as a word of self modesty. From Shi Tianding.
Idiom explanation
Letter: obedient, random; letter pen: random writing; graffiti: poor figurative writing, random graffiti. The adjectives are scribbled. Or scribble. Graffiti.
Idioms and allusions
Lu Tong's Shi Tian Ding poem in Tang Dynasty: "suddenly, I turned ink on the case and smeared the book like a crow." Later, "scribble" is used to describe poor writing or random writing.
Idiom usage
In Li Yu's Yi Zhong Yuan Xian Ding of the Qing Dynasty, it is said that "in a remote place, there is no teacher who is particular about it, but scribbles. How can you be generous?"
Chinese PinYin : xìn bǐ tú yā
clumsy in penmanship
Frugality is not in keeping with propriety. jiǎn bù zhòng lǐ
the members of one 's family are partly dispersed and partly dead. jiā pò shēn wáng
Cause trouble and bring disaster. rě zāi zhāo huò
nothing concealed in a straightforward man 's mind. xiōng wú sù wù