Cooking from the bones
It is the same as "dissecting the skeleton to Cuan". It refers to the plight of being surrounded for a long time and having no food or firewood. It also describes the miserable life of the people during the period of war or famine.
Idiom explanation
Pronunciation x ī g ǔ é rchu ī
The interpretation is the same as "jiekuyian". It refers to the plight of being surrounded for a long time and having no food or firewood. It also describes the miserable life of the people during the period of war or famine.
Idioms and allusions
The source of the book "records of the historian · song Weizi family": "Wang asked:" what's going on in the city? " He said, "you can make a meal from the bones, you can make a meal from the bones."
Discrimination of words
Used as predicate or attribute; used in daily life.
Cooking from the bones
store up goods to make a good bargain - tún jī jū qí
hold down a job without doing a stroke of work - shī lù sù cān
harvesting in autumn and storing of grain in winter - qiū shōu dōng cáng