a good-for-nothing
Clothes and rice bags, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī Ji à f à NN á ng, which means a bag for food and a shelf for clothes. It refers to people who have no ability and can't do anything. It comes from the first fold of "the Lord enters the peach garden".
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: wine bag, coat hanger bag
The origin of Idioms
The first fold of Prince yuan's master's entry into Taoyuan: "the rice sac hanger is full of Chang'an, and it's like hemp."
Idiom usage
It refers to the incompetent generation and has a derogatory meaning. example I hate people who are in such a big way. In the second and third chapters of the romance of the Three Kingdoms, Cao Zixiao called him "the governor for money". The rest are clothes hangers, rice bags, wine barrels, meat bags and ears! 」
Chinese PinYin : yī jià fàn náng
a good-for-nothing
sell one 's master and sue for honours. mài zhǔ qiú róng
an old horse which knows the way. shí tú lǎo mǎ
express deep solicitude for. shū shēn zhěn niàn
Drop your head and plug your ears. chuí tóu sāi ěr
in one's seventies and eighties. qī lǎo bā shí
the vicissitudes of official life. huàn hǎi fú chén