Hide your strength
Zang Feng Lian e, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C á NGF ē ngli ǎ n è, which means that people do not show their talents. From Lu Tang Shi Hua.
Idiom explanation
E: blade.
The origin of Idioms
Li Dongyang's Lu Tang Shi Hua of the Ming Dynasty: "Yu Du means to hold high the teeth and the great standard, to be upright and upright, to overcome difficulties and break sharp, then Liu has a day's strength. If you hide your strength, you can win by surprise If you are in danger, you can take what you want. "
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: Zang fenglianying, Zang fenglianying [antonym]: sharp
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attributive. Great wisdom is like a fool, great courage is like a coward. It's not to blame him, but to love him deeply and ask him to hide his strength in order to become a great weapon. There are one or three chapters in Xia Jingqu's exposed words of the old man in the Qing Dynasty.
Hide your strength
arranged in a crisscross pattern - zòng héng jiāo cuò
follow suit without knowing why - ǎi rén kàn chǎng
difficult miscellaneous diseases - yí nán zá zhèng