Liver of rhabdomus
It is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is sh ǔ B ì J ǐ g ā n, which means the world is changeable. It comes from Qian Qianyi's poem of harmony in the immortal altar in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
It is often used in figurative sentences
The origin of Idioms
Qian Qianyi's poem of singing harmony in the altar of immortals (6) in the Qing Dynasty: "I am afraid of the world and know how to talk about tigers, but I can't learn to enjoy dragons at the right time. What's more, we will listen to the work of heaven one by one from now on. "
Idiom explanation
It's said that the rat liver and the worm's arm. Refers to or for the rat arm or liver, refers to the changeable world.
Liver of rhabdomus
the buddha 's mountain and the mustard seed -- to insert the largest thing into the smallest one -- sheer impossibility - xū mí jiè zǐ