an author with many works to his credit
It is a Chinese idiom with the pronunciation of zh ù Zu ò D ě ngsh ē n. It describes that there are so many works that they can stack up to the height of the author. It comes from the biography of Jia Huangzhong in the history of Song Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] Xuefu wuche [antonym] illiterate
The origin of Idioms
Huang Zhongyou is a five-year-old boy. Every day he orders him to stand upright. He compares the book with the book, which is called the book of the same body. Biography of Jia Huangzhong in the history of Song Dynasty
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; as predicate and attribute; with commendatory meaning. All his works over the years were on display at the meeting, when he was a senior citizen. (Mr. Lao She, respected by Cao Yu). 2. Shen Jiaben has been an official for many years and has studied for many years. He has worked hard in his official career. Now he has left 22 kinds of "Mr. Shen Jizhen's posthumous notes" a, 13 kinds of "Mr. Shen Jizhen's posthumous notes" B, and 12 kinds of "zhenbilou series", which are widely involved in Chinese and foreign laws and jurisprudence. His intensive research and erudite knowledge make posterity marvel. It can be said that he has cast the past and the present, and has learned a lot China and the West.
Idiom story
In the Song Dynasty, Jia Huangzhong, a 15-year-old high school Jinshi who was known as a child prodigy, was very strict with his father. He was required to read a certain number of books every day. The way was to expand the length of the articles to be read and use it to measure Huang Zhong's height. You have to read as many articles as you are tall. Huang Zhong's memory is amazing. He can recite it after reading it.
an author with many works to his credit
Take the bell and be a thief - dài zhe líng dāng qù zuò zéi
decision making through operations research - yùn chóu jué suàn
Melting the past and casting the present - róng gǔ zhù jīn