half-believe in
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ā NGX ì NJI ā ngy í, which means a little believe and a little doubt. It's from diaogu battlefield essay.
Idiom explanation
Will: and, again.
The origin of Idioms
Li Hua of Tang Dynasty wrote in his diaogu battlefield essay: "people may have words, but they will not believe."
Idiom usage
In conjunction with; as a predicate, attribute, adverbial; used of something that cannot be easily believed. Ronglu was wary of him, so his indignation was between. Gao Yang's the first volume of the history of the palace of the Qing Dynasty and the tenth chapter of the biography of the heroes of the sons and daughters: "after listening to this, we are skeptical and look at each other face to face." Chapter 21 of Li Baojia's officialdom in the Qing Dynasty: Liu dayuzi is suspicious, I'm afraid it's not right, but it's so far, we can only do it there and talk about it there.
half-believe in
spread out and scatter about like stars in the sky or chessman on the chessboard - qí bù xīng luó