A little bit
A branch, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī zh ī y ī Ji é, which means a branch of a tree and a small part of a thing. It comes from the painting theory by Mo Shilong of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
① A branch of a tree. ② It refers to the small parts of things.
The origin of Idioms
Mo Shilong, Ming Dynasty, wrote in his painting theory that "the orifices of painting trees are only in many twists and turns
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: one limb and one segment
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Examples
The most important part of the article is calm and happy There are many words between them. The implication is that a little is better than a lot. It's his advantage, not the essence of the Six Gentlemen. Zheng Xie's the fifth book of Weixian Shuzhong and shedi in Qing Dynasty
A little bit
The snipe and the clam fight, and the fisherman gains - yù bàng xiāng zhēng,yú wēng
thump one 's chest and stamp one 's feet - chuí xiōng dùn zú
act with courage and determination - hē fó mà zǔ
a ruthless character behind a gentle appearance - mián lǐ cáng zhēn
to open or find a new path or snap course - lìng pì xī jìng