keep indoors

keep indoors

Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z ú B ù ch ū m é n, which means not going out of the gate. It means to keep your door closed. It's from Ling Mengchu's the first time to clap a desk.

The origin of Idioms

Ling Mengchu of Ming Dynasty, Volume 25 of "the surprise of making a case at the first moment", says that Su Pannu never went out of the house since Zhao Sihu, and only waited for Xiangyang to come. "

Idiom usage

To act as a predicate, attribute, or object

Examples

He stayed at home for ten days in the summer vacation.

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