Hakka
Baidinglaike is a Chinese idiom, its pronunciation is B á ID ī ngs ú K è, which means the common people who have no fame, and generally refers to the vulgar people.
explain
Vulgar guest 1. Refers to a guest who is not elegant. 2. It refers to people in the world, as opposed to immortals, monks and hermits. (B á ID ī ngs ú K è) Bai Ding: in the old time, it refers to the common people who did not obtain fame or knowledge: "there are great scholars talking and laughing, and there is no Bai Ding coming and going." it comes from the first fold of Liu Yuxi's "humble chamber inscription" or Ming Dynasty's "Pang Lue Si Jun": "there are no Bai Ding folk coming and going, and there is senior officer Gao Bin talking and laughing." example: he made a wide range of friends, whether he was a layman or a staff sergeant, he treated each other with sincerity and did not distinguish between them.
source
Ming Dynasty's Wumingshi's "Pang Lue Si Jun" a discount: "there are no baiding laymen, but there are Sergeant Gao Bin talking and laughing."
Discrimination of words
[pinyin code]: bdsk [synonym]: common people [antonym]: literati
usage
The beginning is the same; the beginning is the same; the beginning is the same; the beginning is the same; the beginning is the same; the beginning is the same; the beginning is the same; the beginning is the same; the beginning is the same; the ending is the same; the beginning is the same; the beginning is the same; the beginning is the same; the ending is the same; the ending is the same
Hakka
disclaim all achievements one has made - gōng chéng bù jū
confrontation of the three parties in court - sān tóu duì àn
attempt sth. beyond one's capability and end in failure - cāo dāo shāng jǐn