concise and comprehensive
In Chinese idioms, Pinyin is y á NJI ǎ NY ì sh ē n, meaning concise and profound. From "Oubei poetry · Lu fangweng's poetry".
The origin of Idioms
Zhao Yi's Oubei poetry · Lu fangweng's poetry in the Qing Dynasty: "I don't care about the strange and dangerous songs, amazing ears and eyes, but about the simplicity and profundity of words, one word is better than thousands of people."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing. examples although the words are vulgar, the style of writing is extremely vertical and horizontal, and the words are simple and profound, including not leaving. The fourth chapter of three heroes and five righteousness
concise and comprehensive
one 's mind concealed more knowledge than could have been contained in five cartloads of books - xué fù wǔ chē
Plant in the morning and reap in the evening - zhāo zhǒng mù hù