Come back to basics
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ù Lu ò Gu ī B ě n, which means that things always have a certain destination. People who visit other places will eventually return to their hometown. It comes from the biography of Yi Feng in the book of Han by Ban Gu in the Eastern Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Ban Gu's biography of Yi Feng in the book of Han in the Eastern Han Dynasty said, "it's easy and treacherous, but Chen is not the master." Yan shigu quoted Meng Kang of the Three Kingdoms, Wei, as saying: "the wind horn of Yi's family says:" the trees return to their roots, and the water flows to the end. "Therefore, the benefits of trees lie in Hai, the water conservancy lies in Chen, and the prosperity and decline of trees are in their proper places, so the East is the same."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and attribute; it means that things have a certain destination
Analysis of Idioms
The synonym Ye Luo GUI Gen
Come back to basics
hold down a job without doing a stroke of work - shī wèi sù cān
a person who has superb talent - nán zhōu guān miǎn
with a bloody nose and a swollen face - bí qīng liǎn zhǒng
successive distresses as caused by continual wars - bīng lián huò jiē
asking the judge to write a lenient sentence - bǐ dǐ chāo shēng