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Bending over for wudoumi is a Chinese idiom, pronounced w è IW ǔ D ǒ um ǐ zh é y ā o, bending over for a meager salary. Metaphor has no backbone. From the biography of Tao Qian in the book of Jin.
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Idiom: bow down for wudoumi pronunciation: W è IW ǔ D ǒ um ǐ zh é y ā o interpretation: wudoumi: salary of county magistrate in Jin Dynasty, later refers to meager salary; bow down: bow down to salute, refers to bending body. Bow down for a meager salary. Metaphor has no backbone.
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"Jin book · Tao Qian biography" says: "I can't bend down for wudoumi, boxing is evil to villains in the countryside."
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The white ant contends for the nest - bái yǐ zhēng xué
troops more than ten times of the enemy can surround it , and troops more than five times can attack - shí wén wǔ gōng