not enough to go upon
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ù Z ú w é ij ù, which means it can not be used as a basis. It comes from "on the sixth satirical incident of CAI Que's Poems".
Idiom explanation
Sufficient: adequate; evidence: evidence.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Anshi of Song Dynasty wrote "on the sixth satirical incident of CAI Que's poetry writing": "the poem board can be used as a basis to understand the proven trace, but it is not enough to be used as a basis to write a word that is wronged and excused."
Idiom usage
It means that things or words cannot be used as evidence. In Wang Wan's postscript and preface to the eastern capital of the Qing Dynasty, it is said that "it is not based on the profound knowledge of those who are in power."
not enough to go upon
propose a marriage by pointing to the stomach -- an old practice of marriage had been engaged to each other before they were born - zhǐ fù wéi hūn
Back to the mountains and back to the sea - huí shān zhuǎn hǎi
look at fiercely as a tiger does - hǔ shì dān dān