a tiny bit
Yibandian, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī B ā Nb à NDI ǎ n, which means a little bit, often implies the relationship between men and women. It comes from Wang Yuan Xing by Huang Tingjian of Song Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As an object or attributive
The origin of Idioms
Song · Huang Tingjian's "wangyuanxing" CI: "and with a group of half, I'm afraid you don't have clove core." In Song Dynasty, Wu Mingshi's "CuO Li Shen" is the second play: "in recent days, I have had a lot to do with Xiao Sheng, so I can't leave this woman behind."
Idiom explanation
It often implies the relationship between men and women. Class, pass "spot".
Chinese PinYin : yī bān bàn diǎn
a tiny bit
influence character by environment. qián yí àn huà
The wind and the trees are sad. fēng mù hán bēi