On the shelf
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ù Z à Ig ā og é, which means to put it on a high shelf after being tied up. It means not to put it on the shelf. It comes from Wang Zun, biography of the talented scholar of Tang Dynasty, written by Xin Wenfang in Yuan Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As a predicate, an object, or an attribute
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: shelved, shelved, shelved
The origin of Idioms
In Wang Zun, a biography of talented scholars of Tang Dynasty written by Xin Wenfang of Yuan Dynasty, "Zhu menhao's family has accumulated thousands of books, and they are tied up in a high Pavilion. The dust is hidden and the shaft is drawn, and the curtain is fallen."
Idiom explanation
Put it on a high shelf. Don't use metaphors. The same as "Shelved".
On the shelf
set free a tiger back to the mountains - fàng hǔ guī shān
on both sides of the changjiang river - dà jiāng nán běi