set up a separate kitchen
Another stove, Chinese idiom, pronunciation is l ì ngq ǐ L ú Z à o, meaning another stove. It means giving up the original and starting from scratch. It's from Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: unique, innovative, unique Antonyms: as always, unchanged
The origin of Idioms
The fourteenth chapter of Li Ruzhen's Jing Hua Yuan in the Qing Dynasty: "it's only when the trouble comes out that we can't tell the difference between rice and dung that we can start a new stove."
Idiom usage
When the second normal school is dissolved, it is necessary to recruit new students and recruit new staff. Fifty years of Liang Bin's red flag
set up a separate kitchen
On the Bagong mountain, there are all kinds of soldiers - bā gōng shān shàng,cǎo mù jiē bīng
expect to see someone who never comes - wàng yǎn yù chuān
The army's arsenal, Ma Rushan - bīng cáng wǔ kù mǎ rù huà shān