Zhu Ji Si Lei
Zhu Ji Si Ji is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is zh ū J ī s ī L è I, which means to accumulate bit by bit. It is often used to describe that things are not easy to complete, which is the same as "Zhu Ji Cun Ji" From the history of Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the history of Song Dynasty, volume 179 of Tuotuo in Yuan Dynasty: "at that time, the Cao department did not measure the strength of the State Army, and each case had its own branch, which had the disadvantage of overemphasis. Therefore, the counties and counties converged, the baht accumulated and the silk was tired, and the East and west of the river were especially harmful."
Idiom usage
Used as object, attribute and adverbial; used in figurative sentences.
Examples
Is it Zhu jisilei, a poor village in Xiayi, who is proud of Lu Jing, and Xizu is thrifty? Wang Fuzhi's on reading Tongjian in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : zhū jī sī lèi
Zhu Ji Si Lei
live as a recluse scholar and behave eccentrically. sù yǐn xíng guài
Waterlogging irrigation in mouyi. mó lóng jìn guàn