rotten bones in the graveyard
Dead bones in tombs, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ǒ ngzh ō NGK ū g ǔ, meaning dead bones in tombs, refers to people without power. It comes from the history of the Three Kingdoms, the history of Shu and the biography of Xianzhu.
Idiom explanation
Tomb: Tomb.
The origin of Idioms
"The history of the Three Kingdoms · Shu Shu · biography of the first master": is yuan highway worried about the evil of the country and the family? Dead bones in the grave, why do you mind? "
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning.
Examples
I will catch the dead bones in the grave sooner or later. The 21st chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty
Chen Li's poem "history chanting" said: "the dead bones in the tombs of the Yuan Road, I actually got Jizhou."
The eleventh chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty: uncle Liu Beihai rescues Kong Rong, marquis LV Wenhou, Puyang breaks Cao Cao!
rotten bones in the graveyard
look at one 's image in the mirror and pity oneself - shān jī wǔ jìng
strike the head on the ground and call on heaven - qiāng dì hū tiān