Make progress
To make progress, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is g è NGJ ì NY ī g ā n, which means a step forward. It comes from volume 10 of biography of lanterns in Jingde.
Analysis of Idioms
To a higher level
The origin of Idioms
Shishiyiji said: "a hundred feet of rod is not moving, although it is not true to get into, a hundred feet of rod must progress, and the world is the whole body."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate; used in learning, business, etc. After seeing this legend, posterity once wrote four lines to explain the origin of the author. A dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty
Idioms and allusions
During the Song Dynasty, jingcen, a monk in Changsha, was highly accomplished in Buddhism. He often went to preach and preach in various places. He spoke in simple terms and was eloquent. The audience talked with him about the highest level of Buddhism. He took out the Sutra and read it to everyone: "a hundred Zhang's rod is not moving, although it is not true. The world of ten directions is the whole body. "
Make progress
decline with all sorts of excuses - tuī sān tuī sì
use inferior materials and turn out substandard goods - tōu gōng jiǎn liào
attack by overt and covert means - míng qiāng àn jiàn
body and shadow comforting each other - xíng yǐng xiāng diào