fragments
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī L í Nb à NJI ǎ, meaning originally refers to the dragon in the cloud, East dew a scale, West dew half claw, can't see its whole picture; refers to the sporadic fragments or a part of things. It comes from Su Huan.
The origin of Idioms
Su Huan, Zhongxing Xianqi Ji, written by Gao Zhongwu in Tang Dynasty: "in the past three years, he wrote nine poems of changing temperament, which were written by Li Shuai in Guangzhou. His literary meaning is good at satire, and some of them were found by Chen
Idiom usage
Object, attribute; one-sided thing.
Examples
People in Tang Dynasty thought that he was good at satire, and Chen picked up half a scale. The first collection of yuyinconghua in Tiaoxi, Du Shaoling, by Hu Zai of Song Dynasty
The preface to Shizheng written by Cai Yin in the Qing Dynasty: "search and collect the figures of the past 30 years and compile them into a book."
fragments
bind the feet with a red rope -- to be united in wedlock - chì shéng jì zú
cut off from the long to support the deficiency of the short - jié cháng bǔ duǎn
Cut the clouds and cut the water - cái yún jiǎn shuǐ