get throught a thing carelessly
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C ǎ OC ǎ Oli ǎ OSH ì, which means to end things hastily. It's from Yongchuang sketch: a real record.
Idiom explanation
Cursory: describes sloppy, careless; finished: finished, finished.
The origin of Idioms
"Chen Wenduan asked to revise the history, divided into twenty-eight records, to be prepared in detail, with more than four or five hundred thousand words. In a few days, Wen duanhong and his chronicles were hastily completed. "
Analysis of Idioms
The opposite is meticulous and conscientious
Idiom usage
In a derogatory sense, it means doing things carelessly. Although there is an endless stream of Buddhist scriptures, confessions, hanging offerings and meals, money and money are stingy in the end. Who is willing to be enthusiastic, but ~. In the 110th chapter of a dream of Red Mansions written by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty, Li Zhi in the Ming Dynasty wrote a reply to Jiao Yiyuan: "after writing the Heart Sutra for a friend, there is still one left, so I will continue to fill it in to return him. All things are done in a hurry to amuse themselves. " "If things are settled in a hurry, I think it will never be investigated, and I hope it will not be cheated by corrupt officials! If you are the parents of the people, you should be more generous. " Feng Jicai's carved pipe: "he still needs time to carve some new ones, but he doesn't carve them with so much heart. He just does things in a hurry, and people still want them."
get throught a thing carelessly
Drilling mountains and blocking seas - zuàn shān sāi hǎi