negligible profits
At the end of the knife, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Zhu ī D ā ozh ī mॸ, which means a metaphor for small interests. It's also a metaphor for tiny things. From Zuo Zhuan, the sixth year of Zhaogong.
Idiom explanation
End: tip, tip. It's a metaphor for small benefits. It's also a metaphor for tiny things.
The origin of Idioms
In the sixth year of Zhaogong, Zuo Zhuan: "at the end of the sword, we will fight for it."
Idiom usage
To be formal; to be an object; to be derogatory. Example: biography of Ren Fang in the Southern History: "competing for the lightness of hairiness, the end of the sword." Liu xiaobiao of Liang Dynasty in the Southern Dynasty wrote in the treatise on Guang juejiao: "competing for the lightness of Maoyu, the end of the sword is the end of the sword. In the biography of Ruan Zhong in the book of Jin, it is said that "the custom is harmful, and people lose their nature. At the end of a knife, there is a dispute."
negligible profits
discard the false and retain the true - qù wěi cún zhēn
come down in one continuous line - yī mài xiāng chéng
all over the mountains and plains - màn shān biàn yě