a book which is poorly written and not worth reading
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Z ā IL í Hu ò Z ǎ o, which means that in the past books were printed with pear wood or jujube wood, and it is used to describe the useless and bad books. From notes of Yuewei thatched cottage.
The origin of Idioms
The sixth volume of notes of Yuewei thatched cottage written by Ji Yun in Qing Dynasty: "as for the voice of traffic, calling on strangers, and presenting the sacred, not only was it made in the late Ming Dynasty, but also many people were falsely accused, that is, all the people in Yuequan chanting society were not too sick to be polite."
Idiom usage
As predicate, object and attribute.
Examples
There may be a few words to adopt, please delete them. As for whether there will be disasters, I can't count. (yanzhijing by Gao Yang)
Chinese PinYin : zāi lí huò zǎo
a book which is poorly written and not worth reading
fly one 's falcons and course one 's hounds. fēi yīng zǒu quǎn