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Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi ā ns ī w à NL ǜ, which means thinking repeatedly or in many ways. It comes from Liu Yuxi of Tang Dynasty, who left behind Li Xianggong on his way to Ruzhou.
Idiom usage
A scholar who studies hard, though thinking hard, just wants to use his original style, not to arrange and think out of his own will.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: thoughtfulness, thoughtfulness
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yuxi of the Tang Dynasty wrote the poem "leaving for Li Xianggong on the way to Ruzhou": "a thousand thoughts and worries are as empty as an empty sky. A smile and a word are really valuable."
Idiom explanation
To describe thinking repeatedly or in many ways.
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a well-behaved and dignified country girl - lín xià fēng zhì
rack one 's brains for ingenious devices - qiǎo lì míng sè
not credible unless supported by evidence - wú zhēng bù xìn