stray fragments of text
Chinese idioms, Pinyin is Du à NBI à NC á NJI à n, refers to incomplete books and articles. It comes from Huang Tingjian's book "a few copies of reading".
The origin of Idioms
Huang Tingjian, Song Dynasty, wrote in his book "a few copies of the book of reading": "when you enter a group, you can be a moth, and you can live in a leisurely life with fragmentary and fragmentary materials.
Idiom usage
The military and police hold on to the torch and shine like the day. When they arrive here and there, their eyes are burning and they look around. What they pay most attention to is a piece of red and fragmentary words. (Chapter 50 of the romance of the Republic of China)
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: fragmentary and fragmentary
incomplete parts of ancient scripts
learn from each other by an exchange of views - qiē cùn zhuó mó
distinct eyebrows and bright eyes - xiān méi liàng yǎn
do not go beyond the prescribed limit - bù yuè léi shi