confused with errors and omission
Chinese idioms, Pinyin is C ē NC ī cuॸluॸ, which means a variety of different things, intricately intertwined. It comes from the funny biographies of historical records.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonyms] are uneven and [antonyms] are in order
The origin of Idioms
The funny biographies in historical records: "I'm drunk when I drink, and I'm drunk when I'm stoned." Drink five or six duels Eight fights and drunk. "
Idiom usage
It is a combination of two types: predicate and attributive. Let's look at Han Yu's theory of "Qi Sheng Yan Yi" and his uneven sentences, which are more or less colloquial. Zhu Ziqing's on the appreciation of both refined and popular tastes and the tenth chapter of Liu e's travel notes of Lao can in Qing Dynasty: "the seven bells do not ring at the same time, and they are also uneven. We should go to the festival at the right time." Note to Guwen Guanzhi: "on the cloud, one Dou and one stone, there are two Dou, five or six Dou and eight Dou, which are scattered."
confused with errors and omission
The river does not make the river - jiāng shuǐ bù fàn hé shuǐ
share the feelings and sentiments - hū xī xiāng tōng
point to a hill and talk about grindstone -- make concealed reference to something - zhǐ shān mài mò