More than ten thousand
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is y ú Qi à NYU è w à n, which means that the number exceeds one thousand or ten thousand. It comes from the ode of Xiang Fei weeping for bamboo by Jiang Fang of Tang Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: tens of thousands
The origin of Idioms
In the Tang Dynasty, Jiang Fang's Ode to Xiang Fei weeping for bamboo: "it's more than ten thousand to carry clouds by brushing water. The common people who know me call me a little bit and write about it, and those who don't know me call me green and resentful."
Idiom explanation
Refers to numbers in excess of one thousand or ten thousand. There are many words.
More than ten thousand
unable to suffer the humiliation made by the warder even if he is a whittled phoney one - kè mù wéi lì
make trouble under a certain pretext - shī chū yǒu míng
drift from one place to another - sì hǎi piāo líng