I will not give up
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ǐ g à IB ù Q ì, which means that old things have their own uses. It comes from the book of rites under the sandalwood bow.
Idiom explanation
It refers to the old things that have their own uses.
The origin of Idioms
Dai Sheng of the Western Han Dynasty wrote in the book of rites, under the tan Gong: "when Zhong Ni's animal and dog died, Zi Gong buried them, saying:" I heard it, I would not give up the curtain to bury the horse; I would not give up the cover to bury the dog. "
usage
It refers to cherishing things structure subject predicate type similar words open the curtain and never give up words with the same rhyme Festival at the same time and different, curtain on the sky and the ground, standing awl, cutting trees and cutting tracks, sparing wealth and justice, being as good as one's wishes, useless military land, Southeast half wall, cheating for personal gain, seeking profit from the root, etc
I will not give up
write well , fast and without need of revision - wén wú jiā diǎn
one 's actions and manners change with the changes of circumstances - yī lóng yī shé
Water injection into suspended channel - xuán hé zhù shuǐ
speak cautiously and act adroitly - nè yán mǐn xíng
the days and months are slipping by , wasted - rì yuè cuō tuó
Strike from the east to the West - dōng shēng xī jī
abolish punishment with punishment - yǐ xíng zhǐ xíng