To be subordinate
Branches and leaves, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ī f ù y è C ó ng, which means branches and leaves are attached to the trunk. It refers to the subordinate attached. From selected works Chen Lin.
Idiom explanation
The branches and leaves are attached to the trunk. It refers to the subordinate attached.
The origin of Idioms
"The prime minister (referring to Cao Cao) holds the title of national power and eliminates harm for the people. The prime minister is the ultimate villain and must be a foreign leader. As for the subordinates, they are not special diseases in the imperial edict."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Examples
Li Shanzhu: "Yang Xiong's nueling Fu says:" the branches follow the leaves, and the scenery follows. "
Chinese PinYin : zhī fù yè cóng
To be subordinate
investigate openly and secretly. míng chá àn fǎng
habits become one's second nature. xí yǔ xìng chéng
confirmed habits are hard to get rid of. jī zhòng bù fǎn
not to recognize one 's own closest relatives. liù qīn bù rèn
bad name for thousands of years. yí chòu wàn shì