compromise
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ù g ǔ B ù J ī n, which means that things are abnormal, which has never existed in ancient and modern times. It's from Geng, taixuanjing.
Idiom explanation
It means that things are abnormal, which has never been seen in ancient and modern times. Originally, he satirized people for learning nothing, but pretended to be weird. It is often used to describe compromise.
The origin of Idioms
Yangxiong's taixuanjing Geng of the Han Dynasty said: "tongniujiaoma is immortal."
Idiom usage
There were two torches in the distance, which were suspected to be tiger eyes. Before that, there were several officers in service, and their clothes were not old and modern. Ji Yun's notes of Yuewei thatched cottage in Qing Dynasty (Volume 18)
compromise
Painting a dragon is not a dog - huà lóng bù chéng fǎn wéi gǒu
A man stands on his fist and a horse on his arm - quán tóu shàng lìdérén,gē bó shàng zǒudémǎ
Push the pear to yield the jujube - tuī lí ràng zǎo
like the palm of one 's own hand - làn rú zhǐ zhǎng