shape without soul
Tujiwagou is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is t ǔ J ī w ǎ g ǒ u, which means a metaphor for something that has no real name but no practical use. It is the same as "tujiwagou". From the patriotic struggle of Shandong people around the May 4th movement.
The origin of Idioms
Yan Bozhen's "patriotic struggle of Shandong people around the May 4th Movement" said: "the ferocious army and police were stunned, one by one at a loss, crouching on the roadside like local chickens and wagons."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; of something that is not practical.
Idiom story
Romance of the Three Kingdoms, written by Luo Guanzhong. The scene is that Cao Cao praises the majestic army horse of Hebei Province, general Yan Liang is majestic, and Guan Yu shows contempt for the local chicken and tile dog and the head of the auction.
Chinese PinYin : tǔ jī wǎ gǒu
shape without soul
present a false appearance of peace and prosperity. fěn shì tài píng
high degree of difficulty reflects masterly skill. yīn nán jiàn qiǎo
one has reached the highest rank open to a subject. wèi jí rén chén
Take the emperor to make the world better. xié tiān zǐ yǐ lìng tiān xià
profound in substance and beautiful in style. chén bó jué lì
knowingly follow the example of a wrongdoer. qún qǐ xiào yóu
One will get nowhere if he lacks single-mindedness and perseverance.. duō qí wáng yáng