Branches and leaves
Branches and leaves, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is zh ī f ù y è Li á n, meaning that the metaphor is closely related. It is the same as "with branches and leaves attached". It comes from the biography of Jiang Wei in the annals of the Three Kingdoms.
Idiom explanation
Metaphors are closely related. It is the same as "with branches and leaves attached".
The origin of Idioms
In the annals of the Three Kingdoms, Shu annals and Jiang Weizhuan, Pei Songzhi's annotation quoted the annals of Huayang, which was written by Chang Xun of Jin Dynasty, as follows: "Wei is evil, Huang Hao is good at anything, and he wants to kill it. Later, the master said, "I'm going to leave you Why do you mind? " Wei saw that Hao had many branches and leaves, and he was afraid of losing his words
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: a branch attached to a leaf
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attribute; used in figurative sentences
Chinese PinYin : zhī fù yè lián
Branches and leaves
to be falsely taking part in the discussions. qiǎng zuò jiě rén
If you don't get dirty, you can't do more than that. bù sè xià liú,bù zhǐ bù xíng
make constant progress in one's studies. gān tóu rì jìn