too busy to attend to all
The Chinese idiom, pronounced y ì gji ē B ù Xi á, originally describes a variety of scenery, too late to watch. After many people or things to describe too much to deal with. It comes from the new words of the world.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yiqing of the Southern Song Dynasty wrote in the new sayings of the world: from the mountain to the vagina, the mountains and rivers grow correspondingly, which makes people overwhelmed
Idioms and allusions
During the Jin Dynasty, Prince Jing loved to visit mountains and waters. He once described the scenery of mountains to people and said, "when you walk on the mountain, the scenery of mountains and waters is shining with each other all the way, which makes people dazzled and unable to see. If it's the turn of autumn and winter, it's even more unforgettable. "
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: too much to see; Antonyms: Ying Fu Yu Ru; homonyms: don't embrace the lute, chew teeth, know people and observe, Jinse Nianhua, Fu Yin Mingda, firmness and perseverance, water and rice don't stick to teeth, clear virtue and cautious punishment, absent mindedness
Idiom usage
Subject predicate, as predicate and attributive, refers to very busy. example when the car was running towards Shennongjia mountain area, it was amazing to see strange peaks and mountains coming.
Chinese PinYin : yìng jiē bù xiá
too busy to attend to all
Learn to read and learn to play. xué shū xué jiàn
To move Qi and nourish the body. jū yí qì,yǎng yí tǐ
be six of one and half a dozen of the other. bàn jīn bā liǎng
complicated and difficult to deal with. pán gēn cuò jié
a person of heavy responsibility. tài shān liáng mù