A thousand miles away
A thousand miles away, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī h á oqi ā NL ǐ, which means that although the error is small, it causes great harm. It comes from the book of rites.
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences
The origin of Idioms
According to the book of rites, the book of changes says, "a gentleman should be careful when he starts; if he is poor, he should be brave, and if he is brave, he should be brave." In the book of rites of great Dai Baofu: "the book of changes says that" if you correct the origin, you will find all kinds of physics; if you miss a little, you will be far away from it. " Lu Bian notes: "according to Yi Shuo, Yan Ye."
Idiom explanation
It means that although the error is small, the harm caused by it is great.
Chinese PinYin : yī háo qiān lǐ
A thousand miles away
wring one 's heart to the very core. āi tòng yù jué
It's too late to cover your ears. jié léi bù jí yǎn ěr
thoughts and feelings ane inspired by things. jiè jǐng shēng qíng
all for himself , none for others. yǒu jǐ wú rén
see the head of the magic dragon but not its tail. shén lóng jiàn shǒu