Gezhuiluzhuang
Ge Lu Shuang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ě J ù L ǚ Shu ā ng, which means wearing summer shoes in winter. It means being too thrifty. It comes from the book of songs, Wei Feng and Ge Yi.
The origin of Idioms
"The book of songs · Weifeng · geyu": "entanglement, can you walk frost?" "You learn qionglin. Volume 2. Clothing category:" Ge Zhuo's shoes are frosty. He is too stingy. "
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences
Gezhuiluzhuang
ask people whether they feel hot - xū hán wèn nuǎn
When water is wet, fire is dry - shuǐ liú shī,huǒ jiù zào
take up the cudgels for the injured party - dǎ bào bù píng