The origin of the idiom: Ming Li's book burning etiquette in the morning and evening: "Answer any questions. Silence without asking. You will feel at ease, relax, and dare not go slow and be rude. " Usage of idioms: as predicate and attribute; Describe being idle and doing nothing.
Example: The Biography of Yue Quan is repeated one or three times: "The sages don't have to worry about it, I'm afraid the court won't let me go; If I can stop, I will be relieved. "
Feng Ming magnum scroll 36: It's better to stay at home and have a happy life, but go to such trouble to eat! "
"Awakening Marriage Biography Evergrande hates Yuanyang tapeworm": "We are monks, and there is nothing to pester us, and there are no children to bind us. We recite scriptures all day, enjoy a pot of incense and a pot of tea, and sleep on paper when we are tired. Are we happy? "
Qian Qing Cai's "Yue Quan Chuan" is the thirteenth time: the sages don't have to worry about it, fearing that the court will not let me go; If I can stop, I will be relieved. I will stay in my hometown after retirement, but I am also very at ease.
Free, quiet, free, free. Describe nothing at leisure. From: Ming Li Zhi's Etiquette of Going to Appointments and Burning Books in the Morning and Evening: "Answer any questions. Silence without asking. You will feel at ease, relax, and dare not go slow and be rude. " Synonyms are: freedom and leisure are neutral idioms and joint idioms; Can be used as predicate and attribute; Describe being idle and doing nothing.