Talent of a hundred Li
Talent of a hundred Li, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ǎ IL ǐ zh ī C á I, which means talents who can govern a hundred Li area. It comes from the biography of Jiang Wan in the annals of the Three Kingdoms.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Jiang Wan in the annals of the Three Kingdoms, Shu annals: "Jiang Wan, the instrument of the country, is not a talent of a hundred Li."
Analysis of Idioms
Bai Li Cai
Idiom usage
A person of ordinary ability.
Examples
The earth is popular, but people are not talented. ——Luo Binwang's farewell to Zheng Anyang
Talent of a hundred Li
it 's unnecessary to go into details - wú yōng zhuì shù
Riding Cao does not remember horse - qí cáo bù jì mǎ
have no devotion to material things - jū wú qiú ān
the wells are dry and the fences are dilapidated - duàn jǐng tuí yuán