Idle and idle
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Zu ā NL ǎ Nb ā ngxi á n, which means to flatter and make fun of others. It's from killing dogs and persuading husbands.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth part of killing a dog and persuading a husband written by Wu Mingshi in Yuan Dynasty: "he seems to be so lazy and idle, that is to say, he is a wife and a son."
Idiom usage
Used as predicate, object, attribute; used in writing. Example: the first fold of yuan and Guan Hanqing's Wangjiang Pavilion: "I think of a girl How can you keep your virginity and be brave enough to get ahead of time and help others? " Gao zhanyinghua Fengyue Village. Meng Chengshun's Jiao Hong Ji GUI Tu in Ming Dynasty
Idle and idle
individual thinking is as varied as individual looks - rén xīn rú miàn