Head of football
Xianzuketou, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi ǎ NZ ú K ē t ó u, meaning bareheaded and barefoot. It comes from the biography of Zhang Yi in historical records.
Notes on Idioms
Ketou: no hat; barefoot: barefoot.
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Yi's biography in historical records: "the head of Hu Ben's scholar Hu Ke.". According to the biography of Wang Yanzhang in the history of the new Five Dynasties, "Yanzhang is brave and powerful, and can walk a hundred steps with bare feet and spines."
Idiom usage
It refers to the incomplete image. Lu Nan drank a few cups and then asked for a big bowl. He ate more than ten bowls in a row. He took off his towel and clothes and sat on the chair. (Yu Shi Ming Yan, Volume 29, by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty)
Head of football
Stick to the weak and embrace the disabled - shǒu quē bào cán
The two sides are interdependent - fǔ yá xiāng yǐ
If a man drinks, he knows the cold and the warm - rú rén yǐn shuǐ,lěng nuǎn zì zhī
be dreesed in fine clothes and ride on well-groomed horses - xiān yī liáng mǎ
Listen to the sound with your bones - chuāi gǔ tīng shēng