move in circles
Cycle, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ú nhu á NW ǎ NGF ù, which means to start over and over again. It is repeated without stopping. It comes from the historical records of Gaozu.
The origin of Idioms
In the historical records of Gaozu, written by Sima Qian of the Han Dynasty, "Taishigong said: '" If the way of the three kings circulates, it will not stop at the end. "
Idiom usage
It's a combination; it's a predicate, an attribute, an adverbial; it's used for people
Examples
Li Hua of Tang Dynasty wrote in the official document of Xiao Gong Cao in Yangzhou for sacrificing his dead friends: "it was called Guan Bao in ancient times, but now Xiao Li has had to. It is really up to us to know the world. It's a cycle. When will it end? "
Tang Xuanzang's "records of the western regions of the Tang Dynasty · molapu" said: "the debate of the Qing Dynasty is like flow, and it goes round and round, and Brahman will thank and bend for a long time."
Liu Dakui's preface of the Qing Dynasty: "I recite Xiangling's poems in a circle, and I sigh that although Xiangling is old, young Yingrui's spirit does not decline."
In the preface to Cheng Kai Liu's journey to Huainan written by Dai Mingshi in the Qing Dynasty, it is said that "those who are engaged in the work of human beings are required to read it, to recite allegorically, and to taste it repeatedly."
Mao Zedong's on practice: "practice, cognition, re practice, re cognition, this kind of form, circulates and even endlessly."
Chinese PinYin : xún huán wǎng fù
move in circles
make one 's country rich and powerful so that its people can enjoy a prosperous life. fù guó qiáng mín
depend on others for one's livelihood. wēi gàn jiù shī
Take the cutting edge and drink the blood. dǎo fēng yǐn xuè
something redundant and not needed. fù zhuì xiàn yóu