Branch to leaf ratio
Branch to leaf ratio, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ī Du ì y è B ǐ, which means that the branches and leaves are relatively parallel. The antithesis sentence pattern of metaphor parallel prose. It comes from Tang Dugu and preface to the collection of Li Gong Zhong in Zhaojun, wailang county.
Idiom explanation
The branches and leaves are juxtaposed. The antithesis sentence pattern of metaphor parallel prose.
The origin of Idioms
Tang Dugu and his preface to the collection of Li Gong Zhong in Zhao county, wailang County, a member of the official Department of the school inspector, said: "it's extremely bad, and Li's couplet makes the branches compare with each other. It takes eight diseases and four tones as the shackles, and the fists and fists guard it, as if they were in accordance with the law."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Chinese PinYin : zhī duì yè bǐ
Branch to leaf ratio
shut the dogs up to beat them. guān mén dǎ gǒu