and so on
By analogy, the Chinese idiom pinyin is y ǐ C ǐ L è ITU ī, which means to deduce the truth of other things similar to this according to the truth of this thing. It's from Qingbo magazine by Zhou Wei of Song Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Used as a clause or adverbial; used in logical reasoning. If you don't believe me, I'll try him on some island names. Sure enough, I remember. It's hard for him. By analogy, we can see that he knows physics, physiology and so on. The 25th chapter of a brief history of civilization by Li Baojia in Qing Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The sixth volume of Qingbo magazine published by Zhou Fei of Song Dynasty: "during the period of Xuanhe, the imperial clan surrounded the furnace and asked for charcoal. When it arrived, he denounced Zuo Youyun:" charcoal is red, now it's black, it's not right. " Cover the taste for cooked fire. By analogy, I don't know that things are difficult! "
Chinese PinYin : yǐ cǐ lèi tuī
and so on
consider everyone beneath one 's notice. mù kōng yú zǐ
shrink back from difficulties. wàng xiù xī xīn