A thousand push and ten thousand resistance
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi ā NTU ī w à NZ ǔ, which describes all kinds of refusal. It comes from Yuan Ke Danqiu's the story of jingchai, the maidservant.
The definition of a thousand resistances
Push: push and drag. Block: block. Push and pull repeatedly. It describes all kinds of refusals and refusals. Source: Yuan Ke Danqiu's Jing Chai Ji: blame maidservant: "when Deng Shangshu talked about marriage, he pushed and resisted everything. When he saw that Wang Taishou was willing, he ignored the Five Canons and three cardinal guides." example: the two children, seeing that they didn't eat, had to take the plate and turn back to their room. Chapter 24 of a journey to the west by Wu Chengen of Ming Dynasty. synonym: push three to block four antonym: be responsible
Idiom information
Idiom explanation: push: push and pull. Block: block. Push and pull repeatedly. It describes all kinds of refusals and refusals. idiom example: Ling Mengchu of the Ming Dynasty, Volume 9 of the second moment of surprise: "but the book of history goes back on its promise, and there is a great deal of resistance." degree of common use: General emotional color: commendatory words grammatical usage: as predicate, object, adverbial; used to push idiom structure: combined generation time: Ancient
A thousand push and ten thousand resistance
Old age and death do not communicate with each other - lǎo sǐ bù xiāng wǎng lái
with one 's face flushed and one 's ears hot - miàn hóng ěr rè
catch bandits first catch the ringleader - qín zéi qín wáng