abandon sources
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B á B ě ns è Yu á n, which means to root out the root of things, mostly for bad things. It comes from Zuo Zhuan, the ninth year of Zhaogong, written by Zuo Qiuming in the spring and Autumn period.
Idiom usage
As predicate and attribute, metaphor abandons the root, so it is the meaning of pulling out the root, and the situation of all things is a great work.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: from the root to the source
The origin of Idioms
In the ninth year of Zhaogong, Zuo Zhuan, written by Zuo Qiuming in the spring and Autumn period, it is said that "in my uncle's life, I have the crown of clothes, the origin of wood and water, and the counselor of people. My uncle, if he split his crown and destroyed his crown, then he would pull out his roots and abandon his master. Although he was in the army, how could he be more than one? "
Idiom explanation
It is a metaphor of abandoning the root. Root out the roots of things. More for bad things. Also known as "pull out the source".
abandon sources
Don't read monk's face, read Buddha's face - bù niàn sēng miàn niàn fó miàn
hundred generations of root and branches - běn zhī bǒi shì
be worth reading a hundred times - bǎi dú bù yàn