examinant
Zhu Yishi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ū y ī sh ǐ zh ě, which means the imperial examination officer. From Hou Ji Lu.
The origin of Idioms
Hou Jilu is quoted from the 38th volume of tianzhongji written by Chen Yaowen in Ming Dynasty: "Ouyang Xiu knows how to give tribute to the imperial examination papers. When he meets an examination paper, he often nods his head when he sits down and feels a person in Zhu Yi, and then his writing goes into the standard." Because the language of its things in the same column, for three sigh. There is a saying: "only Zhu Yi nods."
Idiom usage
As an object and attribute, it refers to examiners. It is often seen in the poems of Song Dynasty. (address book by Liang Zhangju in Qing Dynasty)
Chinese PinYin : zhū yī shǐ zhě
examinant
the refugees are mourning sorrowfully. hóng yàn āi míng
tell a story without missing a single circumstance. dī shuǐ bù lòu
conform to no conventional pattern. bù luò sú tào
decision making through operations research. yùn chóu jiàn cè