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Idioms describing a large collection of books
1 ... Chajia Wanzhou

from a thousand li away

Chajia: Put the book on the shelf. Axis: a stick in an ancient scroll, used to refer to books. Describe a rich collection of books.

The idiom comes from Tang Hanyu's poem "Send Zhuge Jue to Suizhou to study": "There are many books after Ye Jia, and there are 30,000 axes in tea armor."

The second step: a lot of sweat.

Han Shu

Han Niu: Make cows sweat. It means that there are too many books, and the cows are so tired that they sweat when they are transported, and they can be piled on the roof when they are stored. Describe a large collection of books

The origin of the idiom is "Borrowing Books by Huang Sheng" by Qingyuan Mei: "How many scholars are there in a rich family's book?"

3. Nanmian Baicheng

nán miàn büI cheng

Idioms explain the ancient metaphor of nobility and wealth. It also means more books.

The origin of the idiom "Biography of Shu Wei Shi Yi Li Mi": "My husband has thousands of books, why did he leave the south of the city?"

4. Toothpick cardan shaft

yáQin wán Zhu

Idiom explanation describes a large number of books.

This idiom originated from Li Yu in the Southern Tang Dynasty. Jinlouzi; After the poem: "The toothpick is wrapped in red gauze, and RoyceWong's book is on fire."

5. Zuo You's Sutra

Zhu Yuanzhang

Idioms explain that there are history books on the left and classics on the right. Describe a well-read or rich collection of books.

The idiom comes from Lian's "Huang Yi Men Ming": "Look at his pavilion, learn from his left and right, and follow the ropes."