There is nothing to be done
Yuzhen Wudang is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is y ù zh ī w ú D à ng, which means that the jade cup has no bottom. The latter metaphor is gorgeous but not practical.
Idiom explanation
Yi: ancient wine vessel; Dang: bottom. A jade cup has no bottom.
The origin of Idioms
[source]: "Han Feizi Wai Chu Shuo (upper right):" to be the master of a man and to leave out the words of his monarch and his officials, for example, Yu Zhe is not suitable. " In the preface to the ode to the three capitals written by Zuo Si of Jin Dynasty, it is said that "the husband's jade is not appropriate, though it is not practical; the extravagant words are not practical, though it is not classic." In the miscellaneous notes of jinlouzi written by Liang Yuan emperor of the Southern Dynasty, it is said that "Guihua has no substance, Yuzhe has no merit." Liu Zhiji of the Tang Dynasty wrote in Shi Tong Lun Zan: "if yuan Yanbo's affairs were to play the role of Xuan Yan, Xie Lingyun's vanity and high opinion, and Yu Mo was not appropriate, how could it be said." Pu Songling of the Qing Dynasty wrote in Liaozhaizhiyi Zhensheng: "if you want to have all the wine, you can really search your suitcase for drinking utensils. You can't find the right way to drink. If you want to drink a cup of wine, it's full." subject predicate type; attributive; derogatory
Discrimination of words
If you don't get involved in the writing, the whole article will be like a piece of jade, and the jade plate will be missing. Yun Jing's answer to the book of Yangzhou in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : yù zhī wú dàng
There is nothing to be done