about some insignificant matters
Competing for advantages and disadvantages is a Chinese idiom, and the Pinyin is zh ē ngch á NGJ ì ngdu ǎ n, which means to care about small differences and who is up and who is down.
Idioms and allusions
Huang Tingjian of Song Dynasty wrote "there is no injustice in the brothers of other people. They get together by different surnames because they marry their wives. They compete for advantages and disadvantages. They gradually get into the news of the day, and even turn against each other and separate their families." Yuan · anonymous's "Du Liu Cui" the first fold: "secular people have no reason, competing for each other, life and death." Only because Liu Pu's illness is getting worse and worse, I'm afraid it's not proper to prevent him. If he just wants to coax his daughter-in-law to her home, it's business. Therefore, we should not compete with each other. Feng Menglong's Xingshi Hengyan in Ming Dynasty (Volume 8)
usage
Used as a predicate, attribute, or object.
Separate interpretation of words
Fight for the chief: 1. 2. Still fighting for hegemony. 3. Competing for growth.
about some insignificant matters
Just listen to the stairs, no one comes down - zhǐ tīng lóu tī xiǎng,bù ji
The emperor will never die - huáng huáng bù kě zhōng rì
attitude of the confucian school for the appointment - yòng xíng cáng shě
find it hard to vindicate oneself - bǎi kǒu nán fēn