Fragmentary and fragmentary
Fragmentary Guibi, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C á NGU ī Du à Nb ì, which means fragmentary Guibi. It refers to something that is fragmentary but precious. It comes from the fisherman's poem in the valley book collected by Fu Mengliang.
Idiom usage
It can be used as object and attribute; it can be used for incomplete objects examples to create a book with the intention of writing, and it can be used as an article with fragmentary and fragmentary words.
The origin of Idioms
In the Song Dynasty, Lou Yao's "the fisherman's poem in the valley book collected by Fu Mengliang": "although the book is published in various stones, it only gets one third of the total, but the fragmentary guiduanbi should be treasured."
Idiom explanation
Incomplete Guibi. Something that is incomplete but precious.
Fragmentary and fragmentary
travel during the day and sleep at night - xiǎo xíng yè zhù
husband and wife by the first marriage - jié fà fū qī
Abandon the false and follow the true - qì wěi cóng zhēn
have quick wits in an emergency - rén jí zhì shēng