Sausages with grass belly
Cao Wei Cai Chang is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is C ǎ of ù C à ICH á ng, which means that there is no talent. It is also used as a modest word. It's from falling mulberry.
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, Liu Tangqing's the first fold of mulberry falling: "I'm careless and careless. I also recite a poem in front of all the elders. I don't want to be the same."
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: full of classics
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attributive; used in self modesty.
Sausages with grass belly
Xiang Zhuang's sword is aimed at Peigong - xiàng zhuāng zhī jiàn,zhì zài pèi gōng
carry on the past heritage and open up the future - chéng xiān qǐ hòu
Hide the edge and keep the edge - cáng fēng liǎn ruì
harbour resentment in one 's bosom hatred against - huái hèn zài xīn
the needle seems to fly and the thread seems to run - fēi zhēn zǒu xiàn