The trouble of wooden skeleton
The trouble of the wooden skeleton, Pinyin m ù g ě ngzh ī Hu à n, refers to the Hakka died in another country, can not return home.
Pinyin
mùgěngzhīhuàn
explain
It is a metaphor for a guest who dies in a foreign land and cannot return to his hometown.
allusion
Liu Xiang of the Han Dynasty's Shuoyuan Zhengjian: today's Qin Dynasty, the country of four fortresses, has the heart of tiger and wolf, for fear that it may have the trouble of wooden skeleton. during the Warring States period, Mencius was preparing to go to the western state of Qin, and his disciples used fables to admonish him: in Zishui, they heard the dialogue between Tu coup people and Mu Geng people. Mu Geng people said that Tu coup people's predecessor was Tu, and they would melt when they met with water. The local couple said that the mugeng man was the peach of the East Garden and wandered in a foreign land when meeting water. The state of Qin has the heart of tiger and wolf, so we can't go. Mencius adopted the advice of his disciples and did not dare to go to the state of Qin.
Discrimination
Usage: as an object; used in figurative sentences. Words with the same rhyme: shameful, invincible, public born bright, partial dark, wind and rain scattered, poor dagger see, decorate the appearance, be sent to the crown, barking, scattered branches and leaves, horse love inn
The trouble of wooden skeleton
like " cutting and grinding " stones -- to learn from each other - rú qiē rú cuō
smash one 's iron pots and pans into pieces and sell them as scrapped iron - zá guō mài tiě
Village songs and community drums - cūn gē shè gǔ
different approaches but equally satisfactory results - yì qǔ tóng gōng
The change of dragon and leopard - lóng xiāng bào biàn