most suitable and not subject to change
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ì D à NGB ù y ì, which means that the description is extremely appropriate and cannot be changed. It comes from burning books, reading history, and Kong Ming's writing of Shen Han, Guan Zi and Liu Tao.
Idiom usage
It's very appropriate to refer to
The origin of Idioms
Li Zhi of the Ming Dynasty wrote "burning books, reading history, Kong Ming's writing of the six Taos of ShenHan Guanzi" that "Ji Changru said that he had more desires inside and more benevolence and justice outside, and that the six schools of thought were based on the eight characters of" broad but less important, but less effort "
Chinese PinYin : zhì dàng bù yì
most suitable and not subject to change
keep going by painstaking effort. cǎn dàn jīng yíng
try to draw a tiger and end up with the likeness of a dog -- make a poor imitation. huà hǔ chéng gǒu
daily call to religious life. mù gǔ cháo zhōng