echo what the books say
According to the book, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is zh à ob à nxu à NK à, meaning to read articles according to the book; describe lectures, speeches and other rigid in accordance with the text, lecture notes, not play, not vivid. From a dream of Xishu.
Idiom explanation
According to: in accordance with; this: books; propaganda: read; section: section, article.
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, Guan Hanqing's a dream of Xishu, the third fold: "there is no need for monks to hold incantations, and Taoists to preach."
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. Guo Moruo's my childhood: "it's very simple to say it according to the book."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: painting tiger and gourd; Antonyms: taking out of context and adding oil and vinegar
Chinese PinYin : zhào běn xuān kē
echo what the books say
lofty mountains and steep hills. gāo shān jùn lǐng
cut off one 's country from the outside world. bì guān suǒ guó
disease in one 's vital organs. fù xīn zhī jí