To breed
Zizijiji is an idiom pronounced Z ī Z ī J í J í, which describes the appearance of being eager and diligent. It comes from the preface of sending Huang Shumin back to Jinhua province by Liu Ji of Ming Dynasty.
source
In the preface to sending Huang Shumin back to Jinhua, written by Liu Ji of the Ming Dynasty, it is said that "to breed is not inferior to one's own, to admire the light and to cherish the passing water." It's good to have Xi. "
Examples
How could the Japanese not be afraid of making these fake antiques from Han Dynasty to Tang Dynasty. Lu Xun's "grave · talking about beard"
usage
Used as an attributive or adverbial; used in writing
To breed
an ant trying to shake a tree-ridiculously overrating oneself - hàn shù bí fú
This is the only one, no other branch - zhǐ cǐ yī jiā,bié wú fēn d
Chew the palate and beat the bed - jiáo è chuí chuáng
there should be three rounds of discussions before something is decided - sān bǎng dìng àn
Iron bars are ground into needles - tiě bàng mó chéng zhēn