incoherent
Jiaqijiaba, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ā Q ī Ji ā B ā, which means to talk in a confused way. From scholars.
The origin of Idioms
The third chapter of the scholars written by Wu Jingzi in the Qing Dynasty: "it's too much to scold fan."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: rambling and antonym: concise and comprehensive
Idiom usage
It means to talk in a confused way. Example Ling Mengchu of the Ming Dynasty, Volume 24 of his book the surprise of making a case at the beginning of the carving, says: "when the family members are driven away with their sticks, mother Qiu is just scolding them." Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty wrote the 90th chapter of outlaws of the Marsh: "the Han people eat wine and meat at one end, and say a few words at the other end." In Ming Dynasty, Feng Menglong's Xingshi Hengyan: "Zhu Shiyuan was afraid of her mother-in-law's illness, but he was afraid to speak out because he scolded himself." "Awaken the world and persevere in Zhang Tingxiu's escape to save her father": "[sister Rui] shouts all the way to jiaqijiabayi, and clearly wants to annoy sister Yu." Li Yu in Qing Dynasty wrote "how can I get married?" "there is only one surnamed Zhou He said that the man's appearance was not good enough for him, but he cursed me in every way, and even his wife gave me some advice. " Chapter 24 of Li Baojia's a brief history of civilization in the Qing Dynasty: "Hua Fu didn't understand it at all, so he asked in seven or eight
incoherent
Not in his position, not in his politics - bù zài qí wèi,bù móu qí zhèng
Tiger in front door, wolf in back door - qián mén qù hǔ,hòu mén jìn láng
not hurt the important essentials - wú shāng dà yǎ