A vagrant
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is j ī Li ú y ì K è, which means a hermit who is refined from vulgarity. It comes from the postscript of Wu Li Bu Shi Hua written by Li E in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As subject, object, attribute; used in writing
The origin of Idioms
Li e's postscript to Wu Li Bu Shi Hua in the Qing Dynasty: "tasting the postscript and Jingxiang Lu says: all over the counties and cities, anyone who has heard about it will be arrested for his production experience. He can be as charming as the palm of his hand, and he will catch the vagrant. His phrases are just words, and he will also collect circumstantial evidence."
Idiom explanation
It refers to the hermit who is high and refined.
A vagrant
People die for money, birds die for food - rén wèi cái sǐ,niǎo wèi shí wáng
sharp eyes and agile hands or nimble fingers - yǎn jiān shǒu kuài