Bury on the mat
Buried in the mat, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ju à nx í é RZ à ng, which is interpreted as burying a corpse with a reed mat. It comes from Liang Hong, biography of Yimin in the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
It refers to burying a corpse with a reed mat. It's hard to say that funerals are too thin.
The origin of Idioms
Liang Hong, a biography of Yimin in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "when his father asked Wang Mang to be the captain of the city gate, he was granted the title of Uncle Xiuyuan, and his envoy Feng SHAOHAO lived in the north and died. When Hong was young, he was buried in troubled times. "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
Bury on the mat
get fat by going bake on one 's word - shí yán ér féi
seek after glory by selling out one 's own country - mài guó qiú róng
the morning breeze and the lingering moon - xiǎo fēng cán yuè
a makeshift to tide over a present difficulty - wān ròu zuò chuāng