Zhiwu
Zhizhiwuwu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ī zh ī w ú w ú, which means to speak with hesitation and evasion. It comes from Lu Xun's a new edition of stories: the moon.
Analysis of Idioms
It refers to the hesitation and evasion of speech.
The origin of Idioms
In Lu Xun's new stories: running to the moon: "sitting on the wooden couch with the old leopard skin on the opposite side, scratching his scalp, he said:" today's luck is still not good, only crows. "
Idiom usage
It refers to vagueness of speech.
Zhiwu
maintain an old acquaintanceship having no real understanding with each other - bái tóu rú xīn
blot out the sky and cover the sun - zhē tiān gài rì
a single thread can 't make a cord - dān sī bù xiàn
roundness inside but squareness outside - wài fāng nèi yuán