speak in an evasive manner
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Zu ǒ zh ī y ò UW ū, meaning left and right to refuse, extended that many poor to deal with. From the biography of Li Bing in the history of Song Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
Zuo Zhiyou Wu
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Li Bing in the history of Song Dynasty, it is said that "(the enemy) then you can see Wu and Yue from Denglai, and you can see my left side from the sea, and you can see the river from Wuchang, and you can see my right side from the river. If you don't support one place, the whole thing will be over. The original plan was "to falter on the left and to falter on the right."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive. Example: in answer to yuan jiehuan Zhongcheng written by Gao Panlong of Ming Dynasty: "the country has three empty spaces and four exhausts. If you don't give it to me, the name Fu is the same as filling the ears. It's really like the teaching of my husband's ancestor (yuan Keli) I saw him trembling and hesitating, kneeling down on the street, pleading with the guests. The first book of Yan'an Mansion by Wu Mingshi in Yuan Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : zuǒ zhī yòu wū
speak in an evasive manner
a just cause enjoys abundant support. dé dào duō zhù