overgeneralization
In Chinese idioms, Pinyin is y ǐ PI ā ng à iqu á n. It means to take a one-sided view of the whole problem. From Wu Jiaguo's general logic.
The origin of Idioms
Wu Jiaguo's general logic: "only by reading analytically, can we learn deeply, without swallowing the whole and half understanding; only by reading comprehensively, can we learn completely and systematically, without taking the meaning out of context and generalizing the whole."
Idiom usage
It's formal; it's predicate and attribute; it's derogatory; it's one-sided. Examples Deng Xiaoping's "the party's urgent task on the organizational and ideological fronts": "first of all, we must study the issues of discussion and criticism clearly. We must never generalize the whole from a partial perspective. We must not use force to force people to reason."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: a narrow view, a glimpse of the sky, in general, only see the trees, not the forest
overgeneralization
Cherish one's pearls and treasure one's jade - huái zhū bào yù
mencius ' mother moves her home three times to better her son 's education - mèng mǔ sān qiān
pass through the hall into the inner chamber - dēng táng rù shì