I'm so embarrassed
Qiajuiqu is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is á oy á J í Q ū, which means that the article is not easy to read. From Jin Xue Jie.
Idiom explanation
Awkward teeth: not smooth; crooked: twists and turns.
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu's Jin Xue Jie in Tang Dynasty: "Zhou Gao Yin pan, Ji Qiaoya."
Idiom usage
Used as predicate, attribute, complement; used in writing. I have nothing to give you today, but I have some poems about Murata. In the Yuan Dynasty, Dai Yuan's collection of Shanyuan, Shouchen Guibai, and in the Song Dynasty, Lu Dian's collection of Taoshan, Ji Gong Shenzhi's Zengzi Kai, said, "I remember the Zengzi in Xiangnan, and I'll take the pan and Gao to solve the problem." In Ming Dynasty, Hu Yinglin's shisou neibian: "the Yuefu to Jiqu, Zhu Lu, Lin Gaotai and so on." Zou Taofen's experience: Extracurricular Reading: "some words, especially the so-called literal translation, are clumsy."
Chinese PinYin : áo yá jí qū
I'm so embarrassed
A grain of rice is a bundle of wages. lì mǐ shù xīn
mount tai and goose feathers -- a comparison of heavy and light things. tài shān hóng máo
The difference between the two. mù bié huì fēn
slow and steady wins the race. bǒ xíng qiān lǐ
fly swiftly as a frightened swan goose. piān ruò jīng hóng
never relax your vigilance while you live in peace. ān bù wàng wēi