Mai xiushuli
Mai xiushuli, a Chinese idiom, whose pinyin is m à IXI à sh à L í, comes from the book of songs · Wang Feng · Shuli.
The origin of Idioms
"The book of songs · Wang Feng · Shu Li" says: "the Shu Li is the seedling of the millet. "I'll walk in the mill and shake my heart." "Song Weizi's family" in historical records: "Mai Xiu is getting better and better. He's too cunning to be nice to me. "
Analysis of Idioms
A synonym for millet, wheat and corn
Idiom usage
Examples
There are so many poems, such as the thought of the remnant mountains and rivers and the feeling of ~. In Qing Dynasty, pingbuqing's "xiawai Jixie · Qu huiweng"
Mai xiushuli
hold sb . 's whip and follow his stirrup - zhí biān suí dèng