indistinct
Indistinct is a Chinese idiom, the pronunciation is y ǐ NY ǐ NYU ē Yu ē, meaning to look or sound vague, very unclear, feel very not obvious; indistinct, if there is nothing. It's from Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the tenth chapter of Jing Hua Yuan written by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty, "I can see the hillside faintly, but it looks like an arrow shooting straight at the insect's face."
Idiom usage
I heard them talking vaguely. As the sky was getting late, I saw the stars flickering gradually. I heard a sad voice behind me. I felt someone following me. When I looked back, I saw that my mother was following me. (2) in fable's the story of insects, the Green Goblin: "it's like the sound of a pulley, which is not noticeable, and it's like the rustle of a dry wrinkled film.
Chinese PinYin : yǐn yǐn yuē yuē
indistinct
defy steadfastly all brute force. wēi wǔ bù qū
psychological offense is the best of tactics. gōng xīn wèi shàng
seeing that matters are in a bad way. jiàn shì bù miào
swarm as flies do for good or hang round as dogs do for food. yíng yíng gǒu gǒu