Between the lines
In the interlanguage, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h á ngji ā NZ ì L ǐ, which means the middle of the text. From the book of poems in reply to the new Yu marquis.
The origin of Idioms
In the Southern Dynasty, Liang Jianwen emperor's answer to the new Yu Marquis and the book of Songs: "there are three poems hanging down, the wind and the cloud spit out between the lines, and the Pearl and jade are born in the words." Pingbuqing's xiawai (?) Xie · Wenzi Xia · Wenzi Xia · Wendian (circle points) in Qing Dynasty: "there are circle points in the book, which started from the bad habit of selecting and engraving in the middle of pre Ming Dynasty. However, in the words between the lines, eye contact is especially refreshing, so it is imitated and used. "
Analysis of Idioms
words whose meaning is similar
Between the lines, between the lines, between the lines, between the lines
Idiom usage
As subject and object; between words and sentences
Chinese PinYin : háng jiān zì lǐ
Between the lines
copiously quote authoritative works. yǐn jīng jù gǔ