Rooting of branches
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ī m ò sh ē NGG ē n, meaning unreasonable, impossible. It comes from Wang Fuzhi's Jiang Zhai Shi Hua in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
The trees take root on the branches. Metaphor is unreasonable and impossible.
The origin of Idioms
The second volume of Wang Fuzhi's Jiang Zhai Shi Hua in Qing Dynasty: "from inheriting to receiving poems In one of them, four rise and four close, not a worm phase into a green bamboo snake? There is no reason for the two things to come out from the bottom and the branches to have roots. "
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Analysis of Idioms
Related idioms: the branches and leaves are in a stalemate, the branches are growing, the grass is weeding, the seedlings are poor, and the roots are bitter
Rooting of branches
be bereaved of a parent or parents - zāo jiā bù zào
be frightened out of one 's wits - pò sàn hún fēi
retain political power by fair means after capturing it by foul - nì qǔ shùn shǒu
Beat ducks to scare mandarin ducks - dǎ yā jīng yuān yāng