more than can be counted on one 's fingers
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is zh ǐ B ù sh è ngq ū, which means that you can't count your fingers. It's a lot to describe. From "Lang Qian Ji Wen".
Analysis of Idioms
[synonyms] are innumerable, innumerable, innumerable, and [antonyms] are few, few, and few
The origin of Idioms
Chen Kangqi of the Qing Dynasty wrote in Lang Qian Ji Wen: "the ministers of this dynasty who are in charge of the affairs can't be defeated."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; predicate, object, complement; a large number of adjectives. example the meaning of the spring and Autumn Annals is not to say goodbye to the king's orders by his father's orders, nor to say goodbye to the king's affairs by family affairs. Like this, you can't bend your fingers. The first chapter of Zeng Pu's Nie Hai Hua in the Qing Dynasty Yuan Mei's reply to the Marquis of Jinghai in the Qing Dynasty: "these kinds of brush and ink can't be defeated in the mountains. "In the fifth chapter of the wild old man's Expositions," the heroes of ancient times, who have shaved their hair and eyebrows, are even more invincible. 」
Chinese PinYin : zhǐ bù shèng qū
more than can be counted on one 's fingers
Thousands of miles of different wind, hundreds of miles of different customs. qiān lǐ bù tóng fēng,bǎi lǐ bù tóng sú
become a monk or nun late in life. bàn lù chū jiā
the greater fortune one amasses , the greater loss he will suffer. duō cáng hòu wáng
be congenial with each other. shēng yìng qì qiú