What's more, what's more
In Chinese, Pinyin is y í y ǒ uz ú w ú, which means to make up for the deficiency with the superfluous part. It comes from Su Shunqin's book of shangfan Gong's participation in politics.
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
The origin of Idioms
Su Shunqin of the Song Dynasty wrote in the book of shangfan Gong's participation in politics, consultation item 3: "move the four countries, weigh up the goods, level their prices, transfer what is enough, and then carry on the task of the world."
Idiom explanation
It means to make up for the deficiency with the surplus.
What's more, what's more
absolute concentration on studies - mù bù kuī yuán
keep one 's heart as hard as the nether millstone - xīn rú tiě shí