Ten lines at a glance
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is m ù Xi à sh í h á ng, which means reading books very fast. It comes from the popular novel of Beijing - Ao Xianggong.
The origin of Idioms
"A prime minister's surname is Wang Anshi, and he is from Linchuan. He has ten lines and ten thousand books. "
Analysis of Idioms
Ten lines at a glance
Idiom usage
It refers to reading. The fourth volume of Ming Feng Menglong's a warning to the world: "this man ~, the book is very poor."
Ten lines at a glance
see the head of the magic dragon but not its tail - shén lóng jiàn shǒu
desist from military activities and encourage culture and education - yǎn wǔ chóng wén
pointing to the round granary and presenting it as gift to a friend ( a very generous act - zhǐ què xiāng zèng