the lost hairpins and shoes
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y í Z āì Nb ì J ù, which means to refer to old things or old feelings, and is the same as "a lost hairpin falling from a tree". It comes from the biography of Gao Dezheng in the book of the Northern Qi Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Gao Dezheng in the book of the Northern Qi Dynasty, "emperor Wei Jing said," if you want to be different from the six palaces because you want to remember the evils of the last hairpin? " It's my farewell to my wife Binyu. I'd like to hush to hide my tears. "
Analysis of Idioms
"Yizan Maliu", "Yizan Zhui" and "Yizan Tuo" are synonyms
Idiom usage
It is used as an object or attributive; it refers to old things or old feelings.
Chinese PinYin : yí zān bì jù
the lost hairpins and shoes
pay even for a horse 's drink of water -- extreme honesty. yìn mǎ tóu qián
incorporate things of diverse nature. jù shōu bìng xù
like an egg knocking itself against a stone. ruò luǎn tóu shí