shut oneself up in a room making a cart
Building a car behind closed doors is a Chinese idiom, pronounced B ì m é NZ à och à, which means building a car behind closed doors. From the golden mean or ask.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] refuse to remonstrate and act arbitrarily and arbitrarily
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. It is often used for criticism and advice. It is often used as an example. It thinks that it's the right way to go, but the way outside the door is the same as the car it's made. On Yan Fu's salvation
The origin of Idioms
The third volume of "the doctrine of the mean" written by Zhu Xi of Song Dynasty: "as an old saying goes, making a car behind closed doors is the same as making a car out of a rut, and it is the same way."
shut oneself up in a room making a cart
the palace of red jade beside the gates of gold - qióng lóu jīn què
the students surpass the teacher - qīng chū yú lán
the source is distant and the stream long - yuán yuǎn liú cháng
An ugly daughter-in-law must see her father-in-law - chǒu xí fù zǒng de jiàn gōng pó
What you say comes with what you say - yán fā huò suí