store up goods to make a good bargain
Hoarding is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is t ú NJ ī J ū Q í, which means that businessmen hoard a large number of goods, waiting to sell them at a high price and making huge profits. It comes from Ba Jin's talk on & lt; resting Garden & gt.
The origin of Idioms
Ba Jin's talk about & lt; diverticulum & gt;: "smart or more greedy old men have to do some hoarding business."
Idiom usage
It can be used as predicate, attribute, derogatory, etc. Mao Zedong's report on the investigation of the Hunan Peasant Movement: "it is not allowed to raise prices, it is not allowed to ~."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: rare goods, speculation and profiteering
store up goods to make a good bargain
unpredictability of world affairs - dōng hǎi yáng chén
Bury the wheel and break the column - mái lún pò zhù
discard all desires and worries from one 's mind - qīng jìng wú wéi
collaborate from within with forces from outside - lǐ yìng wài hé
pull shaft of a cart and drop to the rut - pān chē wò zhé
remove those who disagree with sb. - pái chì yì jǐ