An uncultivated land
No grazing land, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ù m ù zh ī D ì, which means the land that can't feed cattle and horses, refers to wasteland. It comes from Huan Kuan's on salt and iron and on Gong in Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the Han Dynasty, Huan Kuan's on salt and iron, on merit, said, "an uninhibited people, an uninhabited land."
Idiom usage
It's more formal than formal. It's an object. It's derogatory. It's an example. It's an uninhibited people.
An uncultivated land
true gold does not fear fire - zhēn jīn bù pà huǒ liàn
till seas run dry , stones crumble - shí làn jiāng kū
one 's mind concealed more knowledge than could have been contained in five cartloads of books - xué fù wǔ chē