Vazha's drowning
Wachaniao drowning, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w à ch á Ni à on à, which means breaking tile and urinating. Of something very cheap and filthy. It comes from Zhuangzi's journey to the north.
Idiom information
[Bopomofo] wa Chayu
Broken tiles and urination. Of something very cheap and filthy.
It is often used in figurative sentences
[rhyme words] there are no scruples, no trace of people, covering the sky and confusing the earth, three divisions, Thirty-six Strategies, going for the best plan, pardoning things and punishing people, raising a tiger to kill himself, leading a horse to fight a horse, suppressing the spirit of killing, and making a bad start
The origin of Idioms
In Zhuangzi's journey to the north, Dong Guozi asked Yu Zhuangzi, "the so-called Tao, does evil care?" Zhuangzi said, "everywhere." Dongguozi said: "after the period, we can." Zhuangzi said, "in the mole ant." He said, "why is it so evil?" He said, "I'm in Echinochloa crusgalli." He said, "why is it so evil?" He said, "in Wahu." He said: "he Qiyu is very evil." he said: "drowning in urine." Dongguozi should not.
Idiom story
During the Warring States period, Dong Guozi asked Zhuang Zhou, the representative of his family, what "Tao" was and where it was. Chuang Tzu said that in the ant cave, Dong Kuo Tzu didn't understand. When he asked again, Chuang Tzu said that it existed in weeds, bricks and stones, even in excrement and urine. Dongguozi said how the way would be more and more humble, Chuang Tzu said it lies in those humble places.
Examples of Idioms
Stir up the long river, a crisp drunk, on the big ring can not jump out of Wa Cha drowning. Xu Wei's dream of green countryside in Ming Dynasty
Vazha's drowning
console oneself with soothing remarks - zì wǒ jiě cháo
investigate the hidden mysteries of things - tàn yōu suǒ yǐn
long-drawn and tedious documents - lián piān lěi dú