clumsy in penmanship
Graffiti, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ì Nb ǐ t ú y ā, which means that the figurative characters are poorly written and scribbled. The adjectives are scribbled. Or scribble. Graffiti. It is also often used as a word of self modesty. From Shi Tianding.
Idiom explanation
Letter: obedient, random; letter pen: random writing; graffiti: poor figurative writing, random graffiti. The adjectives are scribbled. Or scribble. Graffiti.
Idioms and allusions
Lu Tong's Shi Tian Ding poem in Tang Dynasty: "suddenly, I turned ink on the case and smeared the book like a crow." Later, "scribble" is used to describe poor writing or random writing.
Idiom usage
In Li Yu's Yi Zhong Yuan Xian Ding of the Qing Dynasty, it is said that "in a remote place, there is no teacher who is particular about it, but scribbles. How can you be generous?"
clumsy in penmanship
learn about its taboos on going to a friend 's house - rù mén wèn huì
marry into sb . 's house in an open , correct manner - míng hūn zhèng qǔ
take pleasure in giving favours - hào xíng xiǎo huì