make gestures
Fingering is an idiom, and its pronunciation is zh ǐ sh ǒ Uhu à Ji ǎ O. it is used to describe the use of hands and feet when speaking. It also refers to blind command, random guidance and criticism. It comes from Xing Shi Heng Yan by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty.
explain
With your fingers, with your feet. It is used to indicate with hands and feet when speaking. It is also used to describe blind command, random guidance and criticism.
usage
Combined; used as predicate and adverbial; with derogatory meaning and random reference
source
In Ming Dynasty, Feng Menglong's Xingshi Hengyan (Volume 15), "when we ask the root cause, Mao Po PI tells us what happened." The 75th chapter of Shi Naian's the complete story of Water Margin: "seeing Li yuhou, Zhang ganban is telling Song Jiang what to do. If you come and I go, you have a heart to kill this guy, but you are standing in the way of Song Jiang and don't dare to do it."
Examples of Idioms
Haoran "sunny day" chapter 86: "this does not need you, of course, we have to leave it to the leadership."
Chinese PinYin : zhǐ shǒu huà jiǎo
make gestures
one who has a promising future. fēi chí zhōng wù
quick reform of one 's faults. zhāo wén xī gǎi
live in straitened circumstances. pá shū yǐn shuǐ
compete with each other for beauty of looks. zhēng yán dòu yàn
splits off as it meets the edge of knife without effort. yìng rèn ér jiě