Genggui calls frequently
Genggui is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ē nggu ǐ P í NH ū, which originally means the argot of begging for food in the army. He borrowed money from others. From Zuo Zhuan, the 13th year of AI Gong.
The origin of Idioms
Liang is not, coarse grain has, if the mountain to shout, said: "Geng GUI!" Zeno. Zuo Zhuan, thirteen years of AI Gong
Idiom story
During the spring and Autumn period, the king of Wu, Fu Chai, and the Jin, Lu and other parliament leagues, and Shen Shuyi, a Wu official, borrowed military supplies from Gongsun Youshan, a Lu official. Gongsun you, a doctor of the state of Lu, replied, "there is no sorghum, and there are still some coarse grains. When the time comes, I will climb up the mountain and shout loudly:" genggui! " We'll see. "
Idiom usage
He is confident that he has talent. He doesn't want to do ordinary work, but he can't do technical work. He has nothing to do all day, and lives a life of constant complaining and no next meal.
Analysis of Idioms
The call of genggui
Genggui calls frequently
Friendship between stone and gold - jīn shí jiāo qíng
leave evil unchecked spells ruin - yǎng yōng yí huàn
expression of thanks for a host 's hospitality - zuì jiǔ bǎo dé
conversant with things present and past - tōng jīn bó gǔ
his future career will be great - qián chéng wàn lǐ
no one picks up what 's left by the wayside - dào bù duō yí