Toothpick shaft
Yazhanjinzhou, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y á Qi ā NJ ǐ nzh ó u, which means the label and scroll of ancient books. It refers to books and describes the beauty of books. It comes from Ming Dynasty's Wu Mingshi's a gift to Secretary and a gift to secretary.
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: toothpick shaft, toothpick shaft
The origin of Idioms
In Ming Dynasty, Wu Mingshi's "gift to Secretary, gift to Secretary", it is said that "my good friend, my window is clear, and I still live together."
Idiom explanation
Labels and scrolls of ancient books. Borrowing refers to books. It describes the beauty of books. It is the same as "toothpick jade shaft".
Toothpick shaft
fight for territory in ancient central China - zhú lù zhōng yuán
be injured in the sinews or bones - shāng jīn dòng gǔ
repent thoroughly of one's misdeeds - tòng gǎi qián fēi
make a laughing stock of oneself before experts - jiàn qiào dà fāng
conference dealing with peace-time matters - yī shāng zhī huì
be prompted by a sudden impulse - xīn xuè lái cháo