Obscure and obscure
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu ì J ì t ā Ogu ā ng, which means to hide one's talent from others. It comes from the biography of Xue Daoheng in the book of Sui Dynasty.
brief introduction
Pinyin: Hu ì J ì t ā Ogu ā ng : obscure, Tao: hidden; trace: trace; light: talent. It refers to hiding one's talent from others. usage: commendatory predicate structure: combined synonym: hide one's light and nourish one's obscurity antonym: show one's strength
source
According to the biography of Xue Daoheng in the book of Sui Dynasty, "if Guangdong is Emperor Wen of Gaozu, the red light will shine on the room at the birth of a saint and the red light will shine on the room at the birth of a spirit, and the purple air will soar in the sky at the time of hiding one's spirit." In Wang Zhongyuan's jiang'ershui · sighing for the world: "bamboo crown, straw shoes, coarse cloth clothes, obscure and low light."
Examples
In order to live in seclusion, he cultivated and hoed himself. The first book of the banquet of peace by Wu Mingshi in Ming Dynasty.
Obscure and obscure
The wolf and the sheep feed together - láng yáng tóng sì
unable to distinguish black from white - bù fēn qīng béi
find it hard to vindicate oneself - yǒu kǒu nán fēn
there were many roads and much business - liù jiē sān mò
Cut off one's share to heal one's family - gē gǔ liáo qīn