Pull out and throw into the well
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B á Xi á t ó UJ ǐ ng, which means staying and drinking. It comes from the biography of Chen Zun in the book of Han Dynasty.
Phonetic notation of Idioms
The key at both ends of the axle.
The origin of Idioms
Chen zunzhuan in the book of Han Dynasty: "Zunqi wine is drunk every day, the hall is full of guests, the door is often closed, the bus is taken and thrown into the well. Although it is urgent, it is not allowed to go."
Idiom usage
It means to be hospitable. When you pull out your jurisdiction and throw it into the well, your mouth will gush and your nose will overflow. "Baopuzi · sajie" by Ge Hong in Jin Dynasty
Idiom story
At the end of the Western Han Dynasty, Chen Zun, Jing Zhaoyin, was forthright, talented and hospitable. Officials from all over the country and heroes from all over the world admired his reputation and often visited him. In order to keep the guests, he ordered the servants to take down the jurisdiction of the guests' carriage and throw it into the well. The guests had to stay and drink with him.
Pull out and throw into the well
palm off a substitute for the real thing - táo jiāng lǐ dài
the bondage of reputation and wealth - míng jiāng lì suǒ
know yourself as well as the enemy - zhī jǐ zhī bǐ