be an anachronism
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B à OC á NSH à uqu à, which means to stick to the incomplete things, to describe conservative thinking and not to accept new things, to say to stick to the ancient way of learning, and to say to stick to doing things under poor conditions. It comes from Gu Yanwu, the successor of Sinology master.
The origin of Idioms
According to Gu Yanwu, a biography of Sinology master written by Jiang Fan in Qing Dynasty, "the two emperors are responsible for the talent of running the world with their extraordinary qualities Is it the common Confucian who clings to the weak and defends the que, or the worldly scholar who seeks to extract words and phrases? " Que, a book for "missing.".
Idiom usage
In today's new products, new equipment, new technology and new materials are springing up, any enterprise will have no way out if it clings to its old ways and does not pay attention to the quality of products. People's daily, April 2, 1981
be an anachronism
invite to one 's side men of wisdom and valor - zhāo xián nà shì
asking the judge to write a lenient sentence - bǐ dǐ chāo shēng
If you don't help yourself, you will be upright - péng shēng má zhōng,bù fú zì zhí