Sanghushu
Sanghu is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is s ā NGH ù Ju à NSH ū, which means taking the mulberry branch as the door and the wooden bar as the pivot. It describes a poor family. It comes from Qin CE Yi.
Idiom explanation
Mr. sanghu
Pinyin: s ā NGH ù Ju à NSH ū
Explanation: take mulberry branch as door and wood bar as pivot. It describes a poor family.
Idioms and allusions
"The Warring States policy of Qin CE 1": "and the husband Su Qin, special poor Lane dig door, sanghu Shushi ear."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Sanghushu
Shrug one's shoulders and bend one's back - sǒng jiān qū bèi
be in the centre of the axle -- hold an important official post - jū zhóu chǔ zhōng