do not hurt the important essentials
In general, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is w ú sh à NGD à t à, which means the main aspects of things, and there is no harm to the main aspects of things. It comes from Mao Jike's preface to modern times.
Idiom explanation
Injury: injury; general: refers to the main aspect of things. There is no harm to the main aspects of things.
The origin of Idioms
In Mao Jike's preface to modern times in the Qing Dynasty, "i.e. anger, bewilderment and drowning, and trace involving wind and thorns, we should not hurt Daya."
Idiom usage
There is no great hindrance
Examples
And that upward spirit is always consistent, not necessarily lax, naturally, occasionally some want to turn the horse's head, but this is also harmless. Lu Xun's Huagai collection my view of Peking University
Analysis of Idioms
[pinyin code]: wsdt
It's harmless
Antonym: a matter of great importance
Xiehouyu: a knife in opera
Lantern riddle: pulling root hair from camel
do not hurt the important essentials
Dragon's eyebrows and leopard's neck - lóng méi bào jǐng
be under attack from all directions - sì miàn shòu dí
a place endowed with the fine spirits of the universe - zhōng líng yù xiù