Broken head and body
Broken head and body, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Su ì sh ǒ um ǐ Q ū, which means broken head and body. In the old days, this phrase was often used by ministers to serve the emperor. From "let the book of history beg people idle redundant table.".
The origin of Idioms
Cai Yong of the Han Dynasty: in March, when he lived in Santai, he was honored. It was not because of his foolishness that he was able to steal. It was not because of his broken head and body that he could make up for it.
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and attribute.
Broken head and body
can 't tell how many there are -- numerous similar cases - bù zhī fán jǐ
The river is clear and the sea is exhausted - hé qīng hǎi jié
tell a story without missing a single circumstance - dī shuǐ bù lòu
gain a superficial understanding through cursory observation - zǒu mǎ kàn huā