a ready-made panacea
Panacea, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l í NGD à NMI à oy à o, which means a very effective and miraculous medicine. It refers to an effective way to solve all problems in fantasy. From play River Pavilion.
Citation explanation
1. It refers to the effective elixir. It's a very effective medicine that can cure all kinds of diseases. Yuan Wumingshi's "play Jiangting" the second discount: "the magic drug is not used, eat ginger, garlic and onion." Yuan Wu Ming Shi's "lame Li Yue's poem playing with Jiang Ting" second discount: "no panacea; eat ginger, scallion and garlic." The 47th chapter of the lamp on the wrong road by Li Lvyuan in Qing Dynasty. I hope the great saint will send out a panacea as soon as possible. Sha Ting's return to the native land: "since you are infected, even if there is a panacea, you can't cure it." also known as "elixir". Mao Zedong's "rectifying the party's style of work": "up to now, there are still many people who regard some individual words and sentences in Marxism Leninism books as ready-made panacea. It seems that as long as they get it, they can cure all kinds of diseases without any effort." A good way to solve all problems. Do you have any panacea for improving your work efficiency
Idiom usage
I hope the great saint will leave early to help. The 47th chapter of light on the wrong road by Li Lvyuan in Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
A clever plan
The origin of Idioms
The second discount of yuan · anonymous's play Jiangting: "you don't need a panacea. You eat ginger, spicy garlic and onion."
a ready-made panacea
fan the flames and add fuel to the flames - zòng fēng zhǐ liáo
very much ruffled , one sputters one 's words - jí yán jù sè
success and failure , gain and loss - chéng bài dé shī