daily necessities as food and clothing
Bubo shusu, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ù B ó sh ū s ù, which means necessities of life. It refers to something very common and indispensable. It comes from Lun GUI Su Shu.
Analysis of Idioms
Basic necessities of life
The origin of Idioms
In Chao CuO's treatise on expensive millet, it is said that "millet, cloth and silk were born in the land, grew up in the time, and gathered together in strength, which can not be completed in a day."
Idiom usage
It refers to the necessities of life. Example: biography of Cheng Yi in the history of Song Dynasty: "the purpose of his words is like that of cloth and silk, especially those who know virtue." Ye Shengtao's Mr. Pan is in trouble: "children's education is like a piece of cloth, which can't be abandoned every day. As for the victorious people, this is something that can not be left in a moment. (why discuss the white paper by Mao Zedong)
daily necessities as food and clothing
the large cups are used and passed around in great frequency - fēi gōng xiàn jiǎ
attend to the trivialities and neglect the fundamentals - bèi běn qū mò