to the crowd 's appetite
Qu Xue a Shi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q ū Xu é ē sh ì, which means to learn something devious to cater to fashion. It comes from the biographies of scholars in historical records.
Idiom explanation
Qu: curved not straight; a: catering.
The origin of Idioms
In the biographies of scholars in historical records, it is said that "we should be honest in learning, but we should be honest in learning."
Idiom usage
Used as predicate, object, attribute; used in learning. Example Huang Wan, the Minister of rites in Nanjing, talks about the people of the humerus. The biography of Lu can in the history of Ming Dynasty. Wu Han's on the civil war movement: "orthodoxy does not exist. If it exists, it is just a willing fabrication by some orthodoxy theorists to serve the new master," Qu Xue a Shi. " In Song Dynasty, ye Shaoweng's "four dynasties record of hearing and seeing · commendation to Yichuan": "sometimes there are teachers and great scholars Then, those who have learned a lot will be excluded. "
to the crowd 's appetite
A grain of rice is a bundle of wages - lì mǐ shù xīn
If you don't ask for anything, you'll find it - háo mò bù zhā,jiāng xún fǔ kē
parade with beautiful dress in broad daylight - yì xiù zhòu xíng