Fu Zhili jujube
Fu Zhi Li Zao, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ù zh ī L í Z ǎ o, which refers to the printed books. It comes from "Liaozhai Zhiyi duanxu".
Idiom explanation
Li jujube: in the old times, Li Mu jujube wood was often used in books, which was called book edition in ancient times.
The origin of Idioms
Pu Songling's Liaozhaizhiyi duanxu in the Qing Dynasty: "however, if you want to pay for the pear jujube, you are stingy with your capital. You are always willing to pay for it. You are always deeply sorry."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attribute; used in publishing, etc. Tang Haoming's Yang Du: "if there is an opportunity in the future, I can spread it in the world, then I will tie a knot in return."
Fu Zhili jujube
take mean advantage of someone when he is down - luò jǐng tóu shí
keep on repeating at great length - lián piān lèi zhì
investigation reveals no evidence - chá wú shí jù